Paper
A younger age for the universe
Published 1999 · Lineweaver
Science
39
Citations
0
Influential Citations
Abstract
The age of the universe in the Big Bang model can be calculated from three parameters: Hubble's constant, h; the mass density of the universe, Omegam; and the cosmological constant, OmegaLambda. Recent observations of the cosmic microwave background and six other cosmological measurements reduce the uncertainty in these three parameters, yielding an age for the universe of 13.4 +/- 1.6 billion years, which is a billion years younger than other recent age estimates. A different standard Big Bang model, which includes cold dark matter with a cosmological constant, provides a consistent and absolutely time-calibrated evolutionary sequence for the universe.
The universe has an age of 13.4 +/- 1.6 billion years, a billion years younger than previous estimates, and a different Big Bang model with cold dark matter provides a consistent evolutionary sequence.
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