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  (Science 
							Cartoons Plus)
 The 
							Universe is expanding. This fact alone suggests 
							a starting point. But unlike circular expansion as 
							we know it, Astronomers abide by the cosmological 
							principle: "Viewed on sufficiently large distance 
							scales, there are no preferred directions or 
							preferred places in the 
							Universe." In other words, there is no known point of origin 
							of the Big Bang and the expansion of the 
							Universe is 
							relative to the observers position in the 
							Universe. The more we learn about our 
							Universe, the more we 
							know the 
							Universe began from a single point of 
							energy some 13.6 billion years ago. The most compelling evidence: The Cosmic 
							Background Radiation. 
							 The 
							temperature of the Cosmic Background 
							Radiation is about 2 Kelvin. With such low 
							temperature, this effect is not the result of any 
							emission from stars or
							galaxies. Think of compressed 
							gas - at its highest compression, the heat can 
							increase very rapidly. But release the gas and the 
							outer envelope cools rapidly - just like the Cosmic 
							Background Radiation (or CMB - Cosmic Microwave 
							Background Radiation). 
								
									|  | At a redshift of 1000 (z=1000), 
									decoupling occurred (around 300,000 years 
									after the Big Bang). Decoupling is just 
									another term for recombination when 
									electrons were bound up by protons. The overall 
									temperature of the CMB is 
									2.735 Kelvin. (Image credit: Brooks/Cole Thomson Learning) |  As an aside, the CMB is the only object in the 
							Universe that represents a near perfect black body 
							(a black body is a theoretical object that absorbs 
							all light that fall onto it - no no transmission or 
							reflection - any emission from the object will be 
							100% of all light that was absorbed). Black body 
							radiation is a term used to study the effects of 
							radiation from stars (and other things that emit 
							radiation). To help understand the Big Bang, we first 
							identify the material involved: Note that this includes matter and antimatter - 
							i.e. the 
							proton is positive and the 
							neutron is not; 
							the electron spins in one direction while the 
							positron spins in the other. For more information on 
							this, please take a look at the introduction to
							Quantum Physics. The timeline (note: we have no idea what happened 
							at exactly T=0 seconds) 
								T = 1/1,000,000 seconds - 
								temperature is 10 
								trillion Kelvin - light elements form: photons, 
								quarks, neutrinos, electrons (no protons or 
								neutrons)T = 1/100 seconds - 
								temperature  is 100 
								billion Kelvin - protons and neutrons formT = 1/10 seconds - 
								temperature  is 50 billion 
								Kelvin - Neutrons less stable and convert back 
								to photons - 60% protons, 40% neutrons - protons 
								join to form deuterium, but unstable at high 
								temperature - deuterium bottleneckT = 1 second - 
								temperature is 10 billion 
								Kelvin - deuterium bottleneck still, now 75% 
								protons and 25% neutronsT = 14 seconds - 
								temperature is 4 billion 
								Kelvin - deuterium bottleneck still, now 82% 
								protons and 18% neutronsT = 3 minutes - 
								temperature now under 1 
								billion Kelvin - deuterium can form (2 protons 
								form nucleus), helium (4 protons) also forms The first 3 minutes of the Big Bang resulted in 
							the nucleosynthesis of both hydrogen and helium - 
							without electrons. Also during this time the 
							temperature rapidly decreased while the expansion 
							rapidly increased. Now for a more "slow" evolution: 
								T = 35 minutes - 
								temperature is now 300 
								million Kelvin - temperature still to hot for 
								hydrogen and helium to bind electrons, increased 
								neutrinos and antineutrinos by positron 
								annihilationT = 1000 years - 
								temperature is now 100,000 
								Kelvin - bridge between radiation dominated and 
								matter dominated
								Universe - Dark EnergyT = 300,000 years - 
								temperature is now only 
								a few thousand Kelvin - recombination transition 
								- electrons can now bind with deuterium and 
								helium nucleus' -
								Universe becomes transparent - CMB Prior to T = 1000 years, radiation in the form of 
							photons and neutrinos dominated the 
							Universe. 
							Deuterium and helium nuclei were still forming but 
							electrons could not be bound. Prior to T = 300,000 
							years, the
							Universe was opaque mainly because of the 
							dominate free electrons. Once the recombination 
							transition was reached, the 
							Universe became 
							transparent. 
							 (Image credit: Brooks/Cole Thomson Learning)
 Astronomers continue to study the 
							  big bang by using tools like computer simulations of 
							dark 
							matter distribution and looking deep into the 
							early
							Universe using the 
							Hubble Space Telescope. Back to Top |