1201.3449 (Helge Kragh)
Helge Kragh
Since the emergence in the late 1960s of the standard hot big-bang theory,
cosmology has been dominated by finite-age models. However, the rival view that
the universe has existed for an indefinite time has continued to be defended by
a minority of researchers. This view has roots far back in history and in the
1950s and 1960s several models were proposed in opposition to the big-bang
paradigm. The most important of the alternative models, the steady-state
cosmology proposed in 1948, was uniformly expanding rather than exhibiting a
cyclical behaviour. In a much revised version it was developed into the
quasi-steady-state cosmological model (QSSC) of the 1990s. From a historical
point of view, this model, and a few other related models, can be seen as the
latest examples of a tradition in cosmological thought that goes back to
ancient Greece. The paper describes the background and development of the QSSC
model.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.3449
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