meteor
Aug8-04, 10:55 AM
<jabberwocky><div class="vbmenu_control"><a href="jabberwocky:;" onClick="newWindow=window.open('','usenetCode','toolbar=no, location=no,scrollbars=yes,resizable=yes,status=no ,width=650,height=400'); newWindow.document.write('<HTML><HEAD><TITLE>Usenet ASCII</TITLE></HEAD><BODY topmargin=0 leftmargin=0 BGCOLOR=#F1F1F1><table border=0 width=625><td bgcolor=midnightblue><font color=#F1F1F1>This Usenet message\'s original ASCII form: </font></td></tr><tr><td width=449><br><br><font face=courier><UL><PRE>Branons are candidates to dark matter. They are divided in cold\nbranons and hot branons. I think that in analogy with ordinary (I\ncould say classical) dark matter, hot branons refer to branons\ntravelling at c, and cold branons to branons travelling at v<c. Is\nthis correct?\nAnother question is: What person proposed the idea of branons?\n\n</UL></PRE></font></td></tr></table></BODY><HTML>');"> <IMG SRC=/images/buttons/ip.gif BORDER=0 ALIGN=CENTER ALT="View this Usenet post in original ASCII form"> View this Usenet post in original ASCII form </a></div><P></jabberwocky>Branons are candidates to dark matter. They are divided in cold
branons and hot branons. I think that in analogy with ordinary (I
could say classical) dark matter, hot branons refer to branons
travelling at c, and cold branons to branons travelling at v<c. Is
this correct?
Another question is: What person proposed the idea of branons?
branons and hot branons. I think that in analogy with ordinary (I
could say classical) dark matter, hot branons refer to branons
travelling at c, and cold branons to branons travelling at v<c. Is
this correct?
Another question is: What person proposed the idea of branons?