Not exact matches
A preview of the data from the balloon mission, presented at a recent meeting on cosmology, hints that the new, sharper view of the ripples will
provide even more evidence of a flat universe, created by an extraordinarily fast inflation of space within a fraction of a second
after the
big bang.
New data on the early cosmos are
providing the strongest evidence yet that our universe underwent an enormous growth spurt shortly
after the
big bang, according to findings announced yesterday at the American Physical Society meetings in Washington, D.C..
After all, cosmology
provides grist to the mill for those looking for signs of a creator: what better evidence than a moment of creation such as the
big bang?
Astronomers have long debated whether such early galaxies could have
provided enough radiation to warm the hydrogen that cooled soon
after the
big bang.