The discussion of cosmological parameters used to be a source of
embarrassment to cosmologists. Today, measurements of the cosmological
parameters are leading the way into the era of precision cosmology. The CMB
temperature is measured to four significant figures, T_0=2.7277+/-0.002 K; the
Hubble constant is now determined with a reliable error estimate, H_0=(65+/-5)
km sec^-1 Mpc^-1; the mass density of baryons is precisely determined by
big-bang nucleosynthesis Omega_B = (0.019+/-0.001) h^-2; and the age of the
Universe inferred from the ages of the oldest stars is 14+/-1.5 Gyr, which is
consistent the expansion age. Further, we have the first full accounting of
matter and energy in the Universe, complete with a self consistency check.
Expressed as a fraction of the critical density it goes like this: neutrinos,
between 0.3% and 15%; stars, between 0.3% and 0.6%; baryons (total), 5+/-0.5%;
matter (total),40% +/- 10%; smooth, dark energy, 80% +/- 20%; totaling to the
critical density (within the errors).Comment: 27 pages LaTeX with 8 eps figures. To be published in The Proceedings
of Particle Physics and the Universe (Cosmo-98), edited by David O. Caldwell
(AIP, Woodbury, NY