

#24 Colin Hill - Modern Cosmology, Hubble Tension, Exotic Physics
13 snips Aug 8, 2025
Colin Hill, a Professor of Physics at Columbia University, is a prominent voice in modern cosmology. He discusses the intriguing Hubble tension and its implications for our understanding of the universe's expansion. The conversation dives into cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation, revealing its role in uncovering the universe's early moments. Colin also shares insights on exotic particles like axions, gravitational lensing, and the future of cosmological research, highlighting fascinating connections between physics and music to illustrate complex concepts.
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Cosmology Faces Multiple Tensions Today
- Kipping introduces Colin Hill to discuss active cosmology controversies: H0, S8, and DESI's dark-energy hint.
- These tensions show cosmology remains exciting, not merely incremental precision work.
CMB Is Remnant Heat From The Big Bang
- The CMB is the cooled remnant radiation from the hot Big Bang.
- Colin Hill explains it comes from an early ionized plasma that cooled as the universe expanded.
Pigeons Helped Reveal The CMB
- Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson detected a persistent hiss on their Bell Labs antenna.
- They killed pigeons in the telescope before learning the hiss was the cosmic microwave background.