either starlight spectra or moving galaxies.
Evenly distributed? read this: http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/bb_theory.html learning to use google could help too.
The two are completely unrelated.
Due to the angle of incidence and atmospheric scattering.
"Cosmic microwave background radiation", or CMB
They discovered cosmic microwave background radiation is a major development in modern physical cosmology
Yes
It is important evidence of the Big Bang.
microwave background radiation is a thermal radiation left from the early stage of universe when it was much small and much hotter and filled with uniformly distributed opaque fog of hydrogen plasma
I sent a form of thermal energy throughout the universe.
I am not entirely sure about the wavelength; however, the features of the background radiation agree very closely to what would be expected from the Big Bang theory.
I didn't check the year... But the cosmic background radiation is said to support the big bang theory, because it agrees with the radiation that is expected from an expanding Universe.
The 'big bang' theory.
For most cosmologists, the refutation of the steady-state theory came with the discovery of the cosmic microwave background radiation in 1965, which was predicted by the Big Bang theory
Hubble's discovery in the 1920s of a relationship between a galaxy's distance from Earth and its speed; and the discovery in the 1960s of cosmic microwave background radiation.
There is a subtle difference. Background count rate is the measure of how strong the background radiation is.
Background radiation come from black body radiation which is mostly infrared and microwave. Background radiation is not harmful at all. Fear from background radiation come from confusion of the word radiation where we mostly concern nuclear radiation, but light is also a form of radiation and we live within the bright day light on a normal basis.
If you are referring to 3k background radiation, the Big Bang.