Update..
A reply from the magazines ast editor says the question has been reffered to the author of the article.
Reading about all this while I wait for the pointer to where the story grew from I learn much. Mostly how little I know but also how little other humans know.
One thing I found exciting was that the inclusion of a "cosmological constant" in the grand plan would help remove a number of current inconsitencies.. one being finding stars older than the sums determine as the age of the Universe..needless to say that makes me very happy as I see the cosmological constant as an attempted mathmatical expression of the concept/idea I keep pursuing...gravity rain... or to make it sound better Universal Pressure.
Reading various old magazines I found some computer generated maps of the background radiation..these maps were generated many years before any experiments were started.. I am not sure if it is a worry or something one should take hope from but these computer generated maps made pre 1991 are so close to the final maps produced such that a casual observation would conclude they are somewhat "identical".
I have wondered how the background radiation maps could be produced given the small range of temperature variation observed to build these new maps of the early Universe.
Add to that a comment I found by one scientist involved in the research that they may need to "tweek" the current maps to adjust for ...well does it matter at this point I am becoming suspicious that somehow they will find what they expected to find when the first computer generated maps in pre 1991 were produced.
So I am even more excited about what the author of the article that started me on this may refer me to... the missing shadows as I said are as I see it one of the most important things to nail down..apart from the reason gallaxies line up as they do ..and a better understanding of dark energy.. and the roll of "dark energy" ..and if the force of attraction is real or a human myth

.
AND remember it is your choice if you read this stuff so dont blame me for writing it

.
alex