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    • Theory of an inflationary universe

      • American physicist Alan Guth was best known for proposing the theory of an inflationary universe, a variation of the big-bang model that was highly influential in guiding modern cosmological thought.
      www.britannica.com › facts › Alan-Guth
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Alan_GuthAlan Guth - Wikipedia

    Along with Alexei Starobinsky and Andrei Linde, he won the 2014 Kavli Prize "for pioneering the theory of cosmic inflation." [1] Guth's research focuses on elementary particle theory and how particle theory is applicable to the early universe.

  3. The Founder of Cosmic Inflation Theory on Cosmology's Next Big Ideas - Scientific American. Physicist Alan Guth, the father of cosmic inflation theory, describes emerging ideas about where our...

  4. MIT Professor Alan Guth studies the early universe. He works on inflation, including the possibility of igniting inflation in a hypothetical laboratory to create a new universe and whether inflation is eternal – it’s always going on, somewhere in the universe.

  5. Photos. See All Images →. American physicist Alan Guth was best known for proposing the theory of an inflationary universe, a variation of the big-bang model that was highly influential in guiding modern cosmological thought.

    • Alan Harvey Guth
    • New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States
    • February 27, 1947
  6. Alan Guth is a theoretical physicist and cosmologist, known mainly for his work on elementary particle theory and how particle theory is applicable to the early universe, and particularly for the idea, which he developed around 1980, of cosmic inflation and the inflationary universe, the idea that the nascent universe passed through a phase of ...

  7. Feb 1, 2003 · February 1, 2003. Alan Guth’s career was up in the air. As an ambitious postdoc at Cornell University in 1978, Guth was looking for a way to contribute to his field of particle physics, but his...

  8. Alan H. Guth (Photo credit: © Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)). I came to MIT as a freshman in 1964, and majored in physics. I was fascinated by the idea that the world could be described by precise mathematical laws, so I chose physics because it was the branch of science most closely connected with the quest to discover the ...

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