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Big Bang
[ big bang ]
noun
- the sudden, instantaneous expansion of space from an exploding point of dense energy, starting the universe:
In the first seconds following the Big Bang, the universe expanded faster than the speed of light.
- Astrophysics. the model or theory that explains the start of the universe by a sudden, instantaneous expansion of space from an exploding point of dense energy (often used attributively):
The Big Bang cannot be tested via experiment, but it can be used to make testable predictions.
The current cosmological model, called the Big Bang, is explained below.
- big bang, any event or action that represents a sudden and massive development (often used attributively):
The Prime Minister's commitment is being seen as one of the big bang decisions of this century.
After spending $750 million on a redesign big bang, the Operations Center had nothing to show for it.
big bang
noun
- any sudden forceful beginning or radical change
- modifier of or relating to the big-bang theory
- sometimes capitals the major modernization that took place on the London Stock Exchange on Oct 27 1986, after which the distinction between jobbers and brokers was abolished and operations became fully computerized
big bang
/ ĭ /
- The explosion of an extremely small, hot, and dense body of matter that, according to some cosmological theories, gave rise to the universe between 12 and 20 billion years ago.
- Compare big crunchSee also open universe
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of Big Bang1
A Closer Look
Example Sentences
Dr. Aparna Venkatesan, an astronomer at the University of San Francisco whose research focuses on cosmology and the re-ionization of the universe after the Big Bang, is a committee co-chair, and Lowenthal and Barentine are committee members, of the Committee to Protect Astronomy and the Space Environment, an advisory committee of the American Astronomical Society.
And if Thatcher's privatisation had given ordinary people the chance to buy shares, her reforms to Britain's financial services sector in 1986, known as the Big Bang, gave ordinary people the chance to sell them too, to get a job in the previously closed world of the City.
Up until then the view had been that after the Big Bang, which created the Universe, its expansion would slow down under the force of gravity.
Labour MP Josh MacAlister, who brought the private members' bill, told MPs that reducing phone use in law would be a "process", not one "big bang" event.
Lemaitre was the first to argue that the expansion must have begun during the big bang.
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