who gave big bang theory

ucatholic.com
This universe has its origin in a great explosion called Big Bang Theory or Mahavistopa theory. The history of the beginning of this theory is written in modern physics in 1927 by a scientist named George Lemaitre, who was also a Roman Catholic priest.

Lemaitre's theory was based on Albert Einstein's theory of relativism.

The Big Bang Theory is a scientific theory of the creation of the universe. According to this, about 15 billion years ago, the entire physical element and energy were confined into one point and then this point started spreading.

In 1929, Edwin Hubble explained that the universe is constantly expanding. This means that the universe must have been dense. According to him, all the galaxies present in the universe are shrinking from each other. According to Hubble, there is a correlation between distant galaxies and they are related to each other through redshift.

After the launch of Cosmic Background Explorer in 1992, it became clear that in the first period of the universe's creation, 99.7% of its total energy was released.

This has proved that the origin of the universe was the result of just one explosion, due to which it was named Big Bang. The density, temperature, and weight of the explosion material were very high and this fact confirms the Big Bang Theory.

In 1964, the British scientist Peter Higgs proposed the theory of the weight of the cosmic fluids in the billionth of a second after the great explosion. This theory was based on the Boson theory of Indian scientist Satyendra Nath Bose.

It was later known as Higgs-Boson. This theory also exposed the mysteries of the origin of the universe and helped to understand and define the nature of the universe.

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