Jeffrey Petit-bois

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By rights, the universe should appear quite lumpy, with one part too distant to have made contact with another distant part. How can the universe appear so uniform, when light simply did not have enough time to mix and spread information from one distant part of the universe to the other? (Princeton physicist Robert Dicke called this the horizon problem, since the horizon is the farthest point you can see, the farthest point that light can travel.)
Parallel Worlds: A Journey Through Creation, Higher Dimensions, and the Future of the Cosmos
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