The Sound of the Big Bang is Hidden in Your TV πŸ”ŠπŸ“Ί


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That static on old TVs isn’t just nois, it’s a 14-billion-year-old echo. Discover how the Big Bang turned the early universe into a giant ringing bell. Subscribe to Orizon Scope for more.

#OrizonScope #BigBang #SpaceFacts #Astronomy #Cosmos #ScienceDaily


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2 Comments

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  1. Where was the big bang? If the known universe is currently 93 billion light years in diameter, the measurement from the edge to the center (radius) is 45 billion light years. How old is the universe? 13.8 billion years old. For matter at the edge of the known universe to be where it is (observed), it would’ve traveled 45 billion light years in 13.8 billion years, or (simplification) 45 light years in 13.8 years. So, do you think that matter, which is restricted to sub-light speed (matter consists of atoms, the outer electron cloud traveling at the speed of light, would fall away, converting the matter to energy, acc’d to Einstein… E=mc^2… electrons traveling speed of light as the matter travels speed of light), can travel 3.26 times the speed of light (average) to get where it is?