Paul Davies (1946–) developed a vacuum model that explains microwave background fluctuation, studies time's arrow, and has written many popular-press books
Marc Davis (1947–) was lead astronomer of a survey of 50,000 high-redshift galaxies
George Efstathiou (1955–) pioneering computer simulations, observations of galaxy clustering and studies of the fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background
Richard S. Ellis (1950–) used gravitational lensing and high-redshift supernovae to study the origin of galaxies, large scale structure, and dark matter
Alexander Friedmann (1888–1925) discovered the expanding-universe solution to general relativity
G
George Gamow (1904–1968) argued that observed proportions of hydrogen and helium in the universe could be explained by the big bang model, modeled the mass and radius of primordial galaxies
Alan Guth (1947–) explained the isotropy of the universe by theorizing a phase of exponential cosmic inflation soon after the big bang
H
Stephen W. Hawking (1942–2018) described singularities in general relativity and developed singularity-free models of the big bang; predicted primordial black holes
György Paál (1934–1992) in the late 1950s studied the quasar and galaxy cluster distributions, in 1970 from redshift quantization came up with the idea that the Universe might have nontrivial topological structure
Thanu Padmanabhan (1957–2021) studied quantum gravity and quantum cosmology
Leonard Parker (1938–) established the study of quantum field theory within general relativity
P. James E. Peebles (1935–) predicted cosmic background radiation, contributed to structure theory, developed models that avoid dark matter
Roger Penrose (1931–) linked singularities to gravitational collapse, conjectured the nonexistence of naked singularities, and used gravitational entropy to explain homogeneity
Arno Penzias (1933–2024) was the first to observe the cosmic background radiation
Saul Perlmutter (1959–) used supernova observations to measure the expansion of the universe
Mark M. Phillips (1951–) used supernova observations to discover acceleration in the expansion of the universe, calibrated the supernova distance scale
Joel Primack (1945–) co-invented the theory of cold dark matter
Ptolemy (90–168) wrote the only surviving ancient text on astronomy, conjectured a model of the universe as a set of nested spheres with epicycles
Q
Ali Qushji (1403–1474) challenged Aristotelian physics, in particular presenting empirical evidence against a stationary Earth, and may have influenced Copernicus
Howard P. Robertson (1903–1961) solved the two-body problem in an approximation to general relativity, developed the standard model of general relativity
Vera Rubin (1928–2016) discovered discrepancies in galactic rotation rates leading to the theory of dark matter
S
Rainer K. Sachs (1932–2024) discovered gravitationally induced redshifts in the cosmic background radiation
Carl Sagan (1934–1996) American astrophysicist, cosmologist and author
Andrei Sakharov (1921–1989) invented the theory of twins, CPT-symmetric universes
Willem de Sitter (1872–1934) developed a theory of dark matter with Einstein, found an expanding matterless solution to general relativity
Vesto Slipher (1875–1969) performed the first measurements of radial velocities for galaxies, providing the empirical basis for the expansion of the universe
Nicholas B. Suntzeff (1952–) used supernova observations to discover acceleration in the expansion of the universe, calibrated the supernova distance scale
Rashid Sunyaev (1943–) developed a theory of density fluctuations in the early universe, described how to use cosmic background distortion to observe large-scale density fluctuations
Alex Szalay (1949–) was working on structure formation in a neutrino-dominated universe, biased galaxy formation in a cold dark matter dominated universe and computing the power spectrum in hot, cold and warm dark matter dominated universes
Neil Turok (1958–) predicted correlations between polarization and temperature anisotropy in the cosmic background, explained the big bang as a brane collision
Henry Tye (1947–) proposed brane-antibrane interactions as a cause of cosmic inflation
V
Alexander Vilenkin (1949–) showed that eternal inflation is generic, studied cosmic strings, theorized the creation of the universe from quantum fluctuations
W
Robert M. Wald (1947–) wrote a popular textbook on general relativity, studied the thermodynamics of black holes and created an axiomatic formulation of quantum field theory in curved spacetime
Arthur Geoffrey Walker (1909–2001) developed the standard model of general relativity and studied the mathematics of relativistic reference frames
David Wands studied inflation, superstrings, and density perturbations in the early universe
Yun Wang (1964–) uses supernova and galactic redshift data to probe dark energy
Jeffrey Weeks (1956–) used cosmic background patterns to determine the topology of the universe
Simon D. White (1951–) studied galaxy formation in the lambda-cold dark matter model
David Todd Wilkinson (1935–2002) used satellite probes to measure the cosmic background radiation
Edward L. Wright (1947–) promoted big bang theories, studied the effect of dust absorption on measurements of the cosmic background radiation