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Plasmas: the first state of matter

Most astronomers believe that the universe began about 15 billion years ago when an explosion led to its expansion and cooling. The present state of the universe compels us to believe that the universe was extremely hot and dense in its infancy. In the beginning there was intense radiation. The phot...

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Autor principal: Krishan, Vinod
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2014
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Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1643507
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author Krishan, Vinod
author_facet Krishan, Vinod
author_sort Krishan, Vinod
collection CERN
description Most astronomers believe that the universe began about 15 billion years ago when an explosion led to its expansion and cooling. The present state of the universe compels us to believe that the universe was extremely hot and dense in its infancy. In the beginning there was intense radiation. The photons produced equal amounts of matter and antimatter and a plasma soup of particles and antiparticles was present. Plasma is the first state of matter from which all the other states originated. This book discusses the diversity of cosmic and terrestrial plasmas found in the early universe, galactic and intergalactic media, stellar atmospheres, interstellar spaces, the solar system and the Earth's ionosphere, and their observability with the most recent telescopes such as the Chandra X-ray telescope and gamma ray telescopes. It deals with different ways of creating plasmas such as thermal, pressure and radiative ionization for laboratory and cosmic plasmas.
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spelling cern-16435072021-04-21T21:22:03Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1643507engKrishan, VinodPlasmas: the first state of matterOther Fields of PhysicsMost astronomers believe that the universe began about 15 billion years ago when an explosion led to its expansion and cooling. The present state of the universe compels us to believe that the universe was extremely hot and dense in its infancy. In the beginning there was intense radiation. The photons produced equal amounts of matter and antimatter and a plasma soup of particles and antiparticles was present. Plasma is the first state of matter from which all the other states originated. This book discusses the diversity of cosmic and terrestrial plasmas found in the early universe, galactic and intergalactic media, stellar atmospheres, interstellar spaces, the solar system and the Earth's ionosphere, and their observability with the most recent telescopes such as the Chandra X-ray telescope and gamma ray telescopes. It deals with different ways of creating plasmas such as thermal, pressure and radiative ionization for laboratory and cosmic plasmas.Cambridge University Pressoai:cds.cern.ch:16435072014
spellingShingle Other Fields of Physics
Krishan, Vinod
Plasmas: the first state of matter
title Plasmas: the first state of matter
title_full Plasmas: the first state of matter
title_fullStr Plasmas: the first state of matter
title_full_unstemmed Plasmas: the first state of matter
title_short Plasmas: the first state of matter
title_sort plasmas: the first state of matter
topic Other Fields of Physics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1643507
work_keys_str_mv AT krishanvinod plasmasthefirststateofmatter