Yes
no
The Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation was predicted by proponents of Big Bang Cosmology (BBC) about 18 years before it was found. Its existence, isotropy, and spectrum is easy to explain with BBC; pretty much impossible to explain using alternatives.
Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation has been discovered via WMAP mission and it is suggested that this has been left over from the Big Bang and galactic clusters are still moving away from each other at an ever increasing acceleration. WMAP's measurements played the key role in establishing the current Standard Model of Cosmology: the Lambda-CDM model. In the Lambda-CDM model of the observable universe, the age of the observable universe is 13.772 ± 0.059 billion years.
The Hubble Space Telescope was flown into space aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery, mission STS-31, on April 24, 1990. On the subsequent servicing mission, in December, 1993, flaws in the original optics were corrected.
The Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) is an isotropic (to one part in 10,000) and continuous radiation from outer space, whose spectrum is identical to that of a blackbody at 2.7K . All of these absolute facts are easy to explain if one assumes Big Bang Cosmology to be true. Indeed, they were predicted by proponents of BBC 18 years before anyone looked for radiation from space. Nothing about CMBR -- not even its existence -- can be explained by any alternative to BBC. Those who deny BBC are reduced to stating, "I agree to the facts about CMBR, but I have absolutely no explanation for its existence, isotropy, or spectrum."
In the centre of the Milky Way.
Yes , it helps to know the background of Hal , the Discovery mission and other characters .
No, Edwin Hubble had nothing directly to do with the Hubble Telescope, it was named for him because he profoundly changed the understanding of the nature of the universe. Hubble died before the the physical exploration of space began. Hubble also created his own Hubble telescope back in 1929 but it is not the orbiting Hubble telescope. Go to the NASA website for more information.
Hubble didn't discover the Milky Way. Its discovery is credited to ancient astronomers. However, Edwin Hubble played a key role in determining that the Milky Way is just one of many galaxies in the universe, through his observations of other galaxies and the expansion of the universe.
Major Events before the "Discovery" of the Philippines
no
4 years
the baradine rsl
Edwin Hubble did not invent the Hubble Space telescope (HST).Edwin Hubble had been dead for forth years before HST was operational.HST is named after him. He was an astronomer.(See related links.)If anything can be said to be invented by Hubble, it is to be found in a few ideas that came out of a few discoveries he made such as the existence of the Universe.Only at the turn of the century with the construction of gigantic telescopes of almost a meter in diameter was it possible to distinguish the blobs known as nebulae as being outside of our galaxy. In the 1920s Hubble's observations confirmed the existence of other galaxies in the universe outside of our own galaxy, an idea that existed, but was controversial and lacked evidence earlier. (Earlier, the universe was thought to be infinite, but mostly empty except for our own little neighborhood of a few billion stars in the Milky Way. As always, we were the center of the Universe.)In the next years, Hubble expanded this with data from others to quantify the observation that the Universe was expanding. (Now called Hubble's Law.) This led, of course, to the first data supporting the Big Bang theory suggested in by Georges Lemaître in 1927.
1) The existence, isotropy, and spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation. It was predicted sixteeen years before it was detected, and has been found to be exactly as proponents of Big Bang Cosmology (BBC) say it should be. All other hypotheses are reduced to saying, "I know the CMBR is there, I just have no explanation for it." 2) The red-shift of all distant galaxies, with the size of the red shift being proportional to the galaxies' distance from us. All observations of this red shift support a Universe that was far denser about 13.7 billion years ago. 3) The ratio of hydrogen and helium in our Universe is exactly as predicted by BBC. 4) Quasars are distant from us (ie, far in our past), but none are close. 5) The ratio of isotopes with long half-lives to their decay products show none of the former existed prior to about 12 billion years ago. 6) No white dwarf stars -- which will remain stable for tens of trillions of years -- have been found older than about ten billion years. The evidence for BBC is as strong as the evidence that our Earth goes around our Sun.
the hubble lets nasa see things at a greater angle then ever before. it lets them see things past Pluto which is a great distance away ____________________ The Hubble is in space, and doesn't have to look at things through a distorting, turbulent blanket of air 100 miles thick.
The Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation was predicted by proponents of Big Bang Cosmology (BBC) about 18 years before it was found. Its existence, isotropy, and spectrum is easy to explain with BBC; pretty much impossible to explain using alternatives.