You are on page 1of 4

The Origin of the Universe The Big Bang By John P. Millis, Ph.D, About.

com Guide

See More About: the big bang origin of the universe beginning of time Sponsored Links Jesus in The Urantia BookIts finally here, the whole story. 2000 year old secrets revealed.www.TruthBook.com God -total Union with GodWhy Jesus is the Only Way to Union? The Answer May Surprise You.www.hallvworthington.com Class 11 + IIT JEE CourseOnline Course + 30 Video Lecture DVDs + 28 Books Set from IIT Alumniwww.topIITcoaching.com Space / Astronomy Ads Big Bang Theory Astronomy Origin Miss Universe Contest Space Images Sponsored Links Science/Maths Class 6-12Video Lessons, Tests, NCERT Solutions, Activities & More. View!TopperLearning.com/Class6_12 Is Jesus Really God?Scholars Examine the Facts About Jesus' Claims to be GodY-Jesus.com In 1959 a survey was conducted of scientists across America concerning their understanding of the physical sciences. One particular question asked What is your concept of the age of the Universe? More than two thirds of the scientists polled responded that there was no origin of the Universe. They believed that the Universe was eternal. Then five years later, in 1964, radio astronomers Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered a microwave signal buried in their data. They attempted to filter out the signal, assuming that it was merely unwanted noise. However, they soon realized what the signal actually was; they had inadvertently discovered the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). The CMB had been predicted by a theory that few

believed at the time called the Big Bang. This discovery was the first evidence that the Universe had a beginning. The Big Bang Once it was understood that the Universe had a beginning, scientists began to ask how did it come into existence, and what existed before it? Most scientists now believe that the answer to the first part of the question is that the Universe sprang into existence from a singularity -- a term physicists use to describe regions of space that defy the laws of physics. We know very little about singularities, but we believe that others probably exist in the cores of black holes. The second part of the question, as to what existed before the Big Bang, has scientists baffled. By definition, nothing existed prior to the beginning, but that fact creates more questions than answers. For instance, if nothing existed prior to the Big Bang, what caused the singularity to be created in the first place? Once the singularity was created (however it happened), it began to expand through a process called inflation. The Universe went from very small, very dense, and very hot to the cool expanse that we see today. This theory is now referred to as the Big Bang, a term first coined by Sir Fred Hoyle during a British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) radio broadcast in 1950. Interestingly, there really wasnt any sort of explosion (or bang) as the name suggests, but rather the rapid expansion of space and time. It is like blowing up a balloon, as you blow air in, the exterior of the balloon expands outward. The Moments after the Big Bang The early Universe was not bound by the laws of physics as we know them today. Consequently, we cannot predict with great accuracy what the Universe looked like during the first minutes of creation. In spite of this, scientists have been able to construct an approximate representation of how the Universe evolved. Scientists believe that the Universe was initially so hot and dense, that even elementary particles like protons and neutrons could not exist. Instead, different types of matter (called matter and anti-matter) collided together, creating pure energy. But as the Universe began to cool during the first few minutes, protons and

neutrons began to form. Then slowly over time these protons, neutrons and electrons came together to form Hydrogen and small amounts of Helium. During the billions of years that followed, stars, planets and galaxies formed to create the Universe as we see it today. Evidence for the Big Bang The CMB signal detected by Penzias and Wilson, a discovery for which they later won a Nobel Prize, is often described as the echo of the Big Bang. Because if the Universe had an origin, it would leave behind a signature of the event, just like an echo heard in a canyon represents a signature of the original sound. The difference is that instead of an audible echo, the Big Bang left behind a heat signature throughout all of space. Another prediction of the Big Bang theory is that the Universe should be receding from us. Specifically, any direction we look out into space, we should see objects moving away from us with a velocity proportional to their distance away from us, a phenomenon known as the red shift. Edwin Hubble, in 1929, was able to correlate the distance to objects in the universe with their velocities -- a relation known as Hubbles Law. Big Bang theorists later used this information to approximate the age of the Universe at about 15 billion years old, which is consistent with other measurements of the age of the Universe. Alternatives to the Big Bang Theory While the Big Bang theory is the most widely accepted theory about the origins of the Universe, and is supported by all the observational evidence, there are other models that explain the evidence equally well. Some of the other theories argue that the Big Bang theory is based on a false premise -- that the Universe is built on an ever expanding space-time. Some, instead, prefer to build theories on a static Universe, which is what was originally predicted by Einsteins theory of general relativity. Einsteins theory was only later modified to accommodate the way the Universe appears to be expanding. Related Articles The Big Bang Theory - What is the Big Bang Theory?

Astronomy and Space Timeline - The History of Astronomy & Space Exploration... Grand Ideas of Science - An Overview of James Trefil's Grand Ideas of S... Timeline of the Universe - Visual Timeline of the Universe - The Big Bang Astronomy and Space Timeline - The History of Astronomy & Space Exploration...

You might also like