Conference: Cosmology on Small Scales - Local Hubble Expansion and Selected Controversies in Cosmology

Conference: Cosmology on Small Scales - Local Hubble Expansion and Selected Controversies in Cosmology Conference: Cosmology on Small Scales - Local Hubble Expansion and Selected Controversies in Cosmology
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    Institute of Mathematics, Czech Academy of Sciences

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  • Updated on 2016-05-07 04:22:00

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Aims and scope:
The problem of cosmological expansion on small scales (e.g., inside the planetary systems) has a long history, dating back to the papers by C.G. McVittie from 1932 and 1933, and quite a large number of researchers dealt with this topic in the subsequent few decades. Although most of them concluded that the Hubble expansion should be strongly suppressed at small distances, there is no commonly-established criterion for such suppression at present and, moreover, the various estimates of the Hubble expansion often contradict each other. Besides, there is some indirect evidence that cosmological expansion might be important, for example, in the long-term evolution of the Solar system. So, it is timely to gather the specialists from different disciplines, ranging from planetology to galaxy evolution, to discuss the problem of local cosmological influences from various points of view, both theoretical and observational.

Conference topics:
Mathematical aspects of small-scale cosmological effects
Probable evidence of the cosmological expansion in various astronomical systems:
- local intergalactic volume,
- single galaxies,
- Solar system (the lunar orbital anomaly, the faint young Sun paradox, the problem of fast satellites, etc.)
Dark-matter and Dark-energy modeling errors in the context of local Hubble expansion