TO BE


149 notes poculum:

10 Scientific Laws and Theories You Really Should Know
by Jacob Silverman via http://www.howstuffworks.com/
10: Big Bang Theory.
If you’re going to know one scientific theory, make it the one that  explains how the universe arrived at its present state. Based on  research performed by Edwin Hubble, Georges Lemaitre and Albert  Einstein, among others, the big bang theory postulates that the universe began almost 14 billion years ago with a  massive expansion event. At the time, the universe was confined to a  single point, encompassing all of the universe’s matter. That original  movement continues today, as the universe keeps expanding outward.
The theory of the big bang gained widespread support in the  scientific community after Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered cosmic microwave background radiation in 1965. Using radio telescopes, the two astronomers detected cosmic  noise, or static, that didn’t dissipate over time. Collaborating with  Princeton researcher Robert Dicke, the pair confirmed Dicke’s hypothesis  that the original big bang left behind low-level radiation detectable  throughout the universe.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-myths/10-scientific-laws-theories1.htm

poculum:

10 Scientific Laws and Theories You Really Should Know

by Jacob Silverman via http://www.howstuffworks.com/

10: Big Bang Theory.

If you’re going to know one scientific theory, make it the one that explains how the universe arrived at its present state. Based on research performed by Edwin Hubble, Georges Lemaitre and Albert Einstein, among others, the big bang theory postulates that the universe began almost 14 billion years ago with a massive expansion event. At the time, the universe was confined to a single point, encompassing all of the universe’s matter. That original movement continues today, as the universe keeps expanding outward.

The theory of the big bang gained widespread support in the scientific community after Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson discovered cosmic microwave background radiation in 1965. Using radio telescopes, the two astronomers detected cosmic noise, or static, that didn’t dissipate over time. Collaborating with Princeton researcher Robert Dicke, the pair confirmed Dicke’s hypothesis that the original big bang left behind low-level radiation detectable throughout the universe.

http://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/everyday-myths/10-scientific-laws-theories1.htm

(via jtotheizzoe)

149 notes
  1. inthenightofwilderness reblogged this from ifihadanorchard
  2. appletothecore reblogged this from ifihadanorchard
  3. douxite reblogged this from welwitschiamirabilis
  4. aitiachica reblogged this from anymore
  5. cominatrix reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  6. arogersford reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  7. carpediem81 reblogged this from paddywax
  8. paddywax reblogged this from ifihadanorchard
  9. electronicaddiction reblogged this from psychoactivelectricity
  10. chaaavan reblogged this from hi-brizil
  11. dede-adolfas reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  12. dangkhoasdc reblogged this from jtotheizzoe
  13. This was featured in #Science