Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
What happened BEFORE the Big Bang?
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
|June 2023
Govert Schilling answers your questions on cosmology’s most confusing concepts
It's the question that always comes up when thinking about the origin of the Universe: what came before? And if there was no 'before', what was the cause of the Big Bang in the first place?
Until a few centuries ago, the answer was easy: some eternal deity set everything in motion. Even Isaac Newton believed that God created the Universe, some 6,000 years ago. Later, many scientists, including young Albert Einstein, assumed the Universe itself to be eternal and everlasting.
But when cosmic expansion was discovered, Belgian cosmologist (and Jesuit priest) Georges Lemaître realised there must have been a beginning - a scientific version of Genesis, so to speak.
Not that everyone immediately agreed. Well into the 1960s, Fred Hoyle's steady-state theory was quite popular among iconoclastic scientists as well as lay people. Hoyle accepted cosmic expansion, but he didn't believe in the Big Bang. Instead, he assumed that a slow, continuous creation of new matter could keep the average density and the general properties of the Universe constant over time.
The 1964 discovery of the cosmic microwave background was the major nail in the coffin of the steady-state theory. Ever since, supporting evidence for the Big Bang origin of our Universe has accumulated to a point where there's hardly any doubt left.
Bu hikaye BBC Sky at Night Magazine dergisinin June 2023 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
BBC Sky at Night Magazine'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Capture NLCs with a smartphone
Make this the summer that you nail a shot of beautiful night-shining clouds
3 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
ZWO Seestar S30 Pro smart telescope
ZWO Seestar S30 Pro smart telescope
4 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
The speed of light
The Universe has a speed limit - and it underpins everything we know about it. We explain the speed of light and its far-reaching implications for astronomy
2 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
COMETS AND ASTEROIDS
Can you spot dim, barely moving Pluto?
1 min
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
THE SKY GUIDE CHALLENGE
What's the youngest Moon you can photograph? Try our ‘impossible’ challenge
2 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Q&A WITH A SCIENCE COMMUNICATOR
As we find more planets in the habitable zones around other suns, we ask Neil deGrasse Tyson what would happen if we did meet intelligent alien life
3 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Make an all-sky camera
How to set up an always-watching system to catch fleeting sky events
3 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
The Universe doesn't need a multiverse
The Universe doesn't need a multiverse The idea that there are many universes seems to solve our most stubborn cosmic mysteries. But, argues Brian Clegg, it's no substitute for hard evidence
2 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
Planets of mystery
Uranus and Neptune – visited just once, 40 years ago – are the least-known planets in our Solar System. Now 21st-century science has revealed they may not even be the ‘ice giants’ we thought. Joseph Phelan investigates
6 mins
July 2026
BBC Sky at Night Magazine
THE BIG THREE
The top sights to observe or image this month
4 mins
July 2026
Translate
Change font size
