The oldest part of the universe, more than 10 billion light years away, bursts with super-luminous quasars and diffuse aggregations of hydrogen gas. Anze Slosar, a cosmologist at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York, wants to map that expanse in 3-D. Slosar looks for and then plots patterns in the periodic density fluctuations of matter that coalesced after the big bang.
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机译:距地球最古老的部分(距离地球有100亿光年以上),充满了超发光的类星体和弥散的氢气聚集体。纽约布鲁克海文国家实验室(Brookhaven National Laboratory)的宇宙学家安泽·斯洛萨(Anze Slosar)希望以3D方式绘制该图。 Slosar在大爆炸后合并的物质的周期性密度波动中寻找并绘制图案。
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