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	Q&A: Cosmology
                        
                    
            Q:
               I would like to know if all these new galaxies spotted with
               Chandra are going to affect the previous calculations of the
               total mass contained in the universe, and also if this is going
               to help to estimate a more accurate date for the Big Bang.
 
               A:
               A recent discovery (see 
               http://chandra.harvard.edu/press/00_releases/press_011300bg.html)
               points to two new types of source: veiled galactic nuclei in
               which an X-ray emitting, but optically obscured black hole is at
               the center of a known galaxy, and a mysterious type of source
               that has yet to be identified with a known galaxy. The first
               type of source should not change our estimate of dark matter
               significantly, since the central black holes contain less than 1
               percent of the total mass of the galaxy. It is impossible to say
               what the effect of the second type will be on our understanding
               of dark matter or the age of the universe, since we are not yet
               sure exactly what these mysterious objects are, or why they give
               off so many X rays. I would say that there is a good chance they
               could affect both.
               
               
        
               
               
   
        



