the Qur'an states that sound waves will cause the judgement day = "But, for thy Lord's (Cause) be patient and constant! (7) Finally, when the Trumpet is sounded, (8) That will be― that Day― a Day of Distress― (9) Far from easy for those without Faith. (10)"
it's kinda funny how even the underlying principles of the universe are uneven and somewhat "flawed". Even the CMB has hot spots and cold spots. Makes me think that the idea of something being perfect is absolutely impossible.
Physicists at RHIC report that the Quark Gluon Plasmas they create are 4 trillion degrees Celsius or about 250,000 times hotter than the center of the Sun. That is the hottest temperature ever recorded.
That is incredible, so this would assumably be contained within an electromagnetic field? Where is this research facility held, the project sounds amazing?
Absolutely fascinating! I was wondering though... the rate of expansion, is it uniform? And if it is, is it calculate-able... or even better, predictable?
Secondly, if the rate of cosmic expansion is slowing down, and you can still detect remants from the big bang in the outer reaches of the universe, how do you know how far back they are from? How do you determine that?
Sorry for the questions. Too much DiscoveryChannel! haha
@daxx1178 The rate of expansion is theorized to be uniform, as the universe contains, in all direction, roughly the same amount of matter ( and possibly dark-matter). On the note of cosmic expansion, as of late, it has been shown that the universe is not slowing down, but rather accelerating as it expands, and you can still detect remnants from the big bang as radio hiss and/or tv static.
Some of your questions I can't answer, I still have lots of questions myself xD
Thanks! This is our first in a series in which we are focusing on explaining nuclear and particle physics concepts and research, with the aim to make it accessible to a wider audience.
the Qur'an states that sound waves will cause the judgement day = "But, for thy Lord's (Cause) be patient and constant! (7) Finally, when the Trumpet is sounded, (8) That will be― that Day― a Day of Distress― (9) Far from easy for those without Faith. (10)"
omairhe 8 months ago
i think the big bang is a crock of shit
TheEgg185 11 months ago
sounds like aum
dnavid 1 year ago
it's kinda funny how even the underlying principles of the universe are uneven and somewhat "flawed". Even the CMB has hot spots and cold spots. Makes me think that the idea of something being perfect is absolutely impossible.
Icix1 1 year ago
@Icix1
Dito to this!
kieron27st 1 year ago
the sound is... oddly alive, like the mewling of a baby monster.
ThatMonsterMan 1 year ago
More simply, what was the highest temperature recorded?
kieron27st 1 year ago
@kieron27st
Physicists at RHIC report that the Quark Gluon Plasmas they create are 4 trillion degrees Celsius or about 250,000 times hotter than the center of the Sun. That is the hottest temperature ever recorded.
soundofthelittlebang 1 year ago
@soundofthelittlebang
That is incredible, so this would assumably be contained within an electromagnetic field? Where is this research facility held, the project sounds amazing?
kieron27st 1 year ago
i have always wondered... how big is the universe really? did the big bang ever happen? if did, what was before that? how many planets have life?
always more questions than answers... it sucks :D and that noise sucks too :D
susspuss 1 year ago
geek speak AND an accent... cute
AntiProtonBoy 1 year ago 2
Absolutely fascinating! I was wondering though... the rate of expansion, is it uniform? And if it is, is it calculate-able... or even better, predictable?
Secondly, if the rate of cosmic expansion is slowing down, and you can still detect remants from the big bang in the outer reaches of the universe, how do you know how far back they are from? How do you determine that?
Sorry for the questions. Too much DiscoveryChannel! haha
daxx1178 1 year ago
@daxx1178 The rate of expansion is theorized to be uniform, as the universe contains, in all direction, roughly the same amount of matter ( and possibly dark-matter). On the note of cosmic expansion, as of late, it has been shown that the universe is not slowing down, but rather accelerating as it expands, and you can still detect remnants from the big bang as radio hiss and/or tv static.
Some of your questions I can't answer, I still have lots of questions myself xD
MoonrayDrake 1 year ago
Did you add the crash sound at the beginning, or was that part of it?
Deciheximal 1 year ago 2
@Deciheximal The crash at the beginning is to illustrate the Big Bang.
skinnym974 1 year ago
This has been flagged as spam show
Hey Agnes, great video!
I'm looking forward to the next one in the series ;D
phmota 1 year ago
Comment removed
phmota 1 year ago
Thanks! This is our first in a series in which we are focusing on explaining nuclear and particle physics concepts and research, with the aim to make it accessible to a wider audience.
agnesmocsy 1 year ago
Nice video - is this channel created only for one topic only though or is there other videos spread throughout U-tube?
skinnym974 1 year ago