Big Bang Script
Big Bang Script
The Big Bang Theory is the leading explanation about how the universe began. At its
simplest, it says the universe as we know it started with a small singularity, then inflated
over the next 13.8 billion years to the cosmos that we know today.
Because current instruments don't allow astronomers to peer back at the universe's
birth, much of what we understand about the Big Bang Theory comes from
mathematical formulas and models. Astronomers can, however, see the "echo" of the
expansion through a phenomenon known as the cosmic microwave background.
While the majority of the astronomical community accepts the theory, there are some
theorists who have alternative explanations besides the Big Bang — such as eternal
inflation or an oscillating universe.
The phrase "Big Bang Theory" has
been popular among astrophysicists for decades, but it hit the mainstream in 2007 when
a comedy show with the same name premiered on CBS. The show follows the home
and academic life of several researchers
In the first second after the universe began, the surrounding temperature was about 10
billion degrees Fahrenheit (5.5 billion Celsius), according to NASA. The cosmos
contained a vast array of fundamental particles such as neutrons, electrons and
protons. These decayed or combined as the universe got cooler.
This early soup would have been impossible to look at, because light could not carry
inside of it. "The free electrons would have caused light (photons) to scatter the way
sunlight scatters from the water droplets in clouds," NASA stated. Over time, however,
the free electrons met up with nuclei and created neutral atoms. This allowed light to
shine through about 380,000 years after the Big Bang.
This early light — sometimes called the "afterglow" of the Big Bang — is more properly
known as the cosmic microwave background (CMB). It was first predicted by Ralph
Alpher and other scientists in 1948, but was found only by accident almost 20 years
later.
Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, both of Bell Telephone Laboratories in Murray Hill,
New Jersey, were building a radio receiver in 1965 and picking up higher-than-expected
temperatures, according to NASA. At first, they thought the anomaly was due to pigeons
and their dung, but even after cleaning up the mess and killing pigeons that tried to
roost inside the antenna, the anomaly persisted.
Simultaneously, a Princeton University team (led by Robert Dicke) was trying to find
evidence of the CMB, and realized that Penzias and Wilson had stumbled upon it. The
teams each published papers in the Astrophysical Journal in 1965.
The cosmic microwave background has been observed on many missions. One of the
most famous space-faring missions was NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE)
satellite, which mapped the sky in the 1990s.
Several other missions have followed in COBE's footsteps, such as the BOOMERanG
experiment (Balloon Observations of Millimetric Extragalactic Radiation and
Geophysics), NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) and the
European Space Agency's Planck satellite.
Examining the CMB also gives astronomers clues as to the composition of the universe.
Researchers think most of the cosmos is made up of matter and energy that cannot be
"sensed" with conventional instruments, leading to the names dark matter and dark
energy. Only 5 percent of the universe is made up of matter such as planets, stars and
galaxies.
While astronomers could see the universe's beginnings, they've also been seeking out
proof of its rapid inflation. Theory says that in the first second after the universe was
born, our cosmos ballooned faster than the speed of light.
That, by the way, does not violate Albert Einstein's speed limit since he said that light is
the maximum anything can travel within the universe. That did not apply to the inflation
of the universe itself.
In 2014, astronomers said they had found evidence in the CMB concerning "B-modes,"
a sort of polarization generated as the universe got bigger and created gravitational waves.
The team spotted evidence of this using an Antarctic telescope called "Background
Imaging of Cosmic Extragalactic Polarization", or BICEP2.
"We're very confident that the signal that we're seeing is real, and it's on the sky," lead
researcher John Kovac, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, told
Space.com in March 2014.
But by June, the same team said that their findings could have been altered by galactic
dust getting in the way of their field of view.
"The basic takeaway has not changed; we have high confidence in our results," Kovac
said in a press conference reported by the New York Times. "New information from
Planck makes it look like pre-Planckian predictions of dust were too low," he added.
The results from Planck were put online in pre-published form in September.
By January 2015, researchers from both teams working together "confirmed that the
Bicep signal was mostly, if not all, stardust
Separately, gravitational waves have been confirmed when talking about the movements and
collisions of black holes that are a few tens of masses larger than our sun. These waves have
been detected multiple times by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory
(LIGO) since 2016. As LIGO becomes more sensitive, it is anticipated that discovering black
hole-related gravitational waves will be a fairly frequent event.
"We will see distant galaxies moving away from us, but their speed is increasing with
time," Harvard University astronomer Avi Loeb said in a March 2014 Space.com article.
"
So, if you wait long enough, eventually, a distant galaxy will reach the speed of light.
What that means is that even light won't be able to bridge the gap that's being opened
between that galaxy and us. There's no way for extraterrestrials on that galaxy to
communicate with us, to send any signals that will reach us, once their galaxy is moving
faster than light relative to us."
Some physicists also suggest that the universe we experience is just one of many. In
the "multiverse" model, different universes would coexist with each other like bubbles
lying side by side. The theory suggests that in that first big push of inflation, different
parts of space-time grew at different rates.
This could have carved off different sections — different universes — with potentially
different laws of physics.
"It's hard to build models of inflation that don't lead to a multiverse," Alan Guth, a
theoretical physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said during a news
conference in March 2014 concerning the gravitational waves discovery. (Guth is not
affiliated with that study.)
"It's not impossible, so I think there's still certainly research that needs to be done. But
most models of inflation do lead to a multiverse, and evidence for inflation will be
pushing us in the direction of taking [the idea of a] multiverse seriously."
While we can understand how the universe we see came to be, it's possible that the Big
Bang was not the first inflationary period the universe experienced. Some scientists
believe we live in a cosmos that goes through regular cycles of inflation and deflation,
and that we just happen to be living in one of these phases.