Recreate Big Bang radiation

Physicists in the US say they have recreated the form of radiation released by the Big Bang in the laboratory to better understand the development of this structure in the early universe.

Physicists in the US say they have recreated the form of radiation released by the Big Bang in the laboratory to better understand the development of this structure in the early universe.

Using extremely cold cesium at vacuum in the University of Chicago (USA), experts have created a structure similar to the cosmic microwave background radiation, which is an echo when the universe was born.

'This is the first time there has been an experiment to replicate the evolution of the newborn universe' , according to Astrology Magazine quoted Professor Cheng Chin.

Picture 1 of Recreate Big Bang radiation

Sky microwave universe - (Photo: ESO)

Under certain conditions, an atomic cloud cooled down to 1 part per cent above absolute zero (-273.15 ° C) in the vacuum room showed a similar phenomenon following the event. Big Bang.

If you want to understand very simply, the Big Bang is an explosion that creates sound, with waves-like movements beginning to interfere with each other, creating complex models, also known as vibrations.

According to the Science report, that is the source of the complexity we see in the current universe.

Chin's team cooled a flat, smooth cloud of about 10,000 cesium atoms to the same temperature, and found they could reproduce vibrations similar to the Big Bang created, expressing an image. about the appearance of the universe for a moment in its early days.

Laboratory reconstructed cesium 'universe' has a diameter of no more than 70 microns, the size of a human hair diameter.

Update 17 December 2018
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