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Olbers' paradox
[ ohl-berz ]
noun
Astronomy.
- the paradox that if the universe consisted of an infinite number of stars equally distributed through space, then every line of sight would come from a star and the night sky would glow uniformly, which is observationally not true.
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Word History and Origins
Origin of Olbers' paradox1
First recorded in 1950–55; after H.W.M. Olbers
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
People have been asking why space is dark despite being filled with stars for so long that this question has a special name – Olbers’ paradox.
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I finally get the answer to the classic astronomy riddle known as Olbers’ Paradox.
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Let’s take a moment to consider everyone’s favorite null result: Olbers’ paradox.
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But there is a precedent of sorts in an old riddle known as Olbers’ Paradox, after Heinrich Wilhelm Olbers, a 19th-century amateur astronomer who enunciated a problem that had bothered some astronomers since the 16th century: Why is the sky dark at night?
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