Sponsored by HowLifeWorks
Who Gets To Use Unsold Cruise Cabins at Huge Discounts view!
howlifeworks.com - How to access once-in-a-lifetime trips at significantly less than full price
8 Comments
- inactive, on 11/07/2009, -2/+9Science -- it works, bitches!
- dan56, on 11/07/2009, -0/+5You can't unfortunately see big bang because when the universe was filled with hot plasma soup it didn't let any light escape that could describe the events before the soup. Hope it makes sense :)
- topsuplstore, on 11/11/2009, -0/+1Correction. 22 of the earliest galaxies in the KNOWN universe. and a reminder that the Big Bang is THEORY not proven fact.
- SammyboyKIDDAH, on 11/08/2009, -0/+1I can't understand why, even though this is on the front page of the science section of digg it has so little comments... Physics can answer the DEEPEST questions a human could ever ask.
How are we here?
That, as we must answer before the question to:
What is the meaning of it?
Surely it a lot more interesting than what new gadget apple is releasing for people to play with... - fieldhockey44, on 11/07/2009, -3/+4It's amazing to think that as telescope technology improves, we can look farther and farther back in time. Theoretically we may someday be able to see the Big Bang itself through a telescope. I hope that happens within my lifetime, I'd love to see those pictures!
- Pinkshisno, on 11/07/2009, -4/+2Science -- it works bitches.
- matrixbinarycod, on 11/07/2009, -5/+1pretty cool how we are looking back in time huh?
mmkay so if we see the big bang, then the big bang, what will we see before that?
my head justa explo - ruckfules, on 11/07/2009, -4/+0Nah. Quantum particles of light, photons, didn't start appearing until some time after the initial expansion of "everything". A revolution in (submit hypothetical new term for "revised optics" here) would be required to "see" the initial expansion or its immediate results.



What is Digg?