Big Bang is the correct answer for the KILT radio trivia.
t
2007-06-22 04:34:42
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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What momentous event do astronomers think “cosmic background radiation” is left over from?
BIG BANG is the us99 trivia answer.
2007-06-22 02:32:01
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answer #2
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answered by zilly 5
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What in the heck is going on here -- this precise question has been asked about 50 times today!
The Cosmic Background Radiation is believed to be the remnants of the Big Bang.
2007-06-22 08:55:21
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answer #3
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answered by Dave_Stark 7
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Big Bang works for radio trivia
2007-06-22 01:00:16
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answer #4
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answered by Robert M 3
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Big Bang
2007-06-22 03:28:18
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answer #5
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answered by Amanda b 3
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Big Bang
2007-06-22 01:51:41
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answer #6
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answered by bucsandducks 6
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THE BIG BANG works for radio trivia
2007-06-22 06:56:37
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answer #7
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answered by flowwer_1371 5
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The Wyh-In-Blazes-Has-This-Been-Asked-Five-Times-In-An-Hour.
Well, or, presuming this is a trivia question, the Big Bang.
Not that that is technically correct - the "cosmic background radiation" is not from the Big Bang itself, but from the universe at an age of about 300,000 - 400,000 years (depending on whose calculations you go by).
Before then, the matter of the universe was ionized and photons would be constantly scattered; at that time, the universe cooled down enough for matter to become neutral (recombination) and thus transparent to photons; matter and radiation "decoupled".
2007-06-22 01:26:42
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answer #8
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answered by The Arkady 4
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Why don't people who hear a question on the radio ever read the board BEFORE posting the question? This question appears FIVE times on the FIRST PAGE right now!
The answer is the Big Bang. As you will see if you look at any of the other four times this question was posted.
2007-06-22 01:23:41
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answer #9
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answered by Jason T 7
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Big Bang
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According to Krauss, since Edwin Hubble advanced his expanding universe observations in 1929, the "pillars of the modern Big Bang" have been built on measurements of the cosmic microwave background radiation from the afterglow of the early universe formation, movement of galaxies away from the Local Group and evidence of the abundance of elements produced in the primordial universe, as well as theoretical inferences based on Einstein's General Relativity Theory.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/05/070524094126.htm
2007-06-22 05:31:13
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answer #10
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answered by sunshine05rose 5
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It appears to be consistent with the Big Bang theory.
2007-06-22 01:04:56
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answer #11
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answered by Kes 7
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