| When people hear the word 
							Cosmology, they fear the worst: 
							relativity, 
							dark 
							matter, 
							galaxy clusters. While these topics are a 
							part of the study of cosmology, they are not the 
							mysterious subjects some make them out to be.
 
							Albert Einstein changed the way we look at our 
							Universe. By realizing that time and space are one 
							(space-time, the 4th dimension), we understand 
							gravitational effects from objects like 
							galaxies and
							dark 
							matter that alter the paths of light. By 
							determining these gravitational effects, we gain 
							insight as to the mass distribution of our Universe 
							and learn how it expands. This section will introduce 
							Einstein's Theory of 
							Relativity and its effect on space-time. We will 
							also take a look at the variety of 
							galaxies in the 
							Universe as well as their distribution in clusters. 
							In addition, we will introduce dark 
							matter - the 
							unknown, highly massive material that is distributed 
							through the halo of 
							galaxies and 
							galaxy clusters 
							that make must almost 90% of all material in the 
							Universe. We will also introduce the
							big bang and 
							the Cosmic Background Radiation - the remnants of 
							the 
							big bang. Most of what we know about cosmology is based on 
							computer simulation and some observational data. 
							What this means is that much of what we know is in 
							flux - that is theoretical with only some 
							observational evidence. However further observation, 
							simulation, and theory refinement is helping to 
							understand the nature of our Universe. So what do we know so far about our Universe? 
							This brief timeline is based from the 
							big bang (T is 
							time after the 
							big bang). 
								13.6 billion years ago T=0, the Universe 
								began with the 
								big bangT = 300,000 years after the 
								big bang, 
								protons and neutrons form (combined from 
								residual quarks)T = 300,000 to 10,000,000 years - 
								recombination, that is hydrogen atoms form (this 
								is what we see in the Cosmic Background 
								Radiation)T = 10,000,000 to 1,000,000,000 years - 
								clumps of matter combine to form proto-galaxiesT = 1,000,000,000  to 3,000,000,000 
								years quasars formT = 3,000,000,000 to 8,000,000,000 years, 
								galaxies formT = 8,000,000,000 to 12,000,000,000 years, 
								our Solar System and planetsThe Universe is expanding, with the most 
								distant 
								galaxies 
								(quasars) expanding faster than nearby
								galaxies Between T = 0 and T = 300,000, many things occur 
							and they will be introduced in the 
							big bang section.							 
							 (Science 
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