When we talk about origin of our universe, a big Bang Theory is among the most accepted.
Since the world is a world, man insistently seeks to know how the universe was created after discovering that we are not the only planet in the galaxy.
In 1930 astronomer Edwin Hubble concluded through research that galaxies have moved away from one of the others and says that in the distant past, from 10 to 15 billion years ago, the galaxies are in the same place.
And in this place where they were all concentrated, the heat was so extreme that it was expanded through the big bang. Although we think it came from an explosion, this study suggests it was an expansion.
That from a tiny state has expanded to what we know today. The study of the big bang does not aim to know what went before it and what exists outside the universe, but rather how it was transformed.
Cosmologist Georges Henri Lemaître first presented a big bang model in 1927. He believed that all matter was concentrated in a single point, which was called the primordial atom.
According to him, this atom was divided into several pieces that were fragmenting more and more until they reached the known atoms.
This thinking demonstrates the possibility that nuclear fission has occurred, when a heavy atom is fragmented into stable, lighter nuclei.
This thesis was seen as incorrect, violating the laws of matter, but even so it served as inspiration for several theories about the origin of our universe.
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Georges-Henri Édouard Lemaître, was a Catholic priest, astronomer, cosmologist and Belgian physicist.
Lemaître proposed what became known as the theory of the origin of the Big Bang universe, which he called the “hypothesis of the primordial atom", or also known as the "cosmic egg", which was later developed by George Gamow.
Asteroid 1565 Lemaître is named after him.
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Where did our universe come from? Discover the most accepted theory among scientists to explain the origin of the Cosmos, the Big Bang!
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