Yes, I did.
It was heard. It was just not immediately accepted by everybody.
Well I have heard that some of the guys on Big Bang do play poker. I have myself heard Jim Parsons admit in at interview that he loves playing poker in his free time.
The Latin term for "big bang" is "motus primordialis" which translates to "primeval motion" or "big bang".
Realistically - it is still going on. The "big bang" was a term coined to ridicule an explanation for the birth of the universe. It was not a "bang" more a rapid expansion. As this expansion is still continuing, the "big bang" has not finished.
The term "big bang" was first coined by Fred Hoyle who used the term to reject the idea. There has never been a paper published called the "big bang theory" and so it is only a collection of concepts built up by physicists and astronomers.
Carol Ann Susi plays the voice of Howard Wolowitz's mother on The Big Bang Theory. She is only heard, never seen.
Creationism.... Inflation,just after the big bang
According to the believes of physics and the big bang, we know that the big bang was both big and a bang. Since we are still receiving radiation from the big bang, So considering that factor I would say that it was big and a bang. What do you believe?
Big Bang - Big Bang album - was created on 2009-08-19.
Biggus Banguss springs to mind. However, the ancient Romans had no concept of the "Big Bang" and are unlikely to have coined a word for it. Caboomus Magni? Magna Boomba? Craccus Major! The term Big Bang was coined by opponents of the theory, and used mockingly at first. You are likely today to see references to 'inflation' or 'expansion' in discussions of the big bang. Be on the look-out; they might be references to the big bang itself.
The term "Big Bang" was coined by the English astrophysicist Fred Hoyle in 1949. The evidence we have indicates that the universe began approximately 13.8 billion years ago in what we call the Big Bang. Hoyle championed a rival "steady state" cosmological theory, but he insisted that the term "big bang" was not meant derisively, but was simply a descriptive way to distinguish the theories. Though the Big Bang suggests a colossal explosion, it wasn't really an "explosion" in the sense that we understand it. Rather, it was a sudden and colossal expansion. http://archive.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/Cosmos/InTheBeginning.html
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