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Map of the Cosmic Background Radiation |
In 1927, the Belgian priest and astronomer Georges
Lemaître discovered Hubble’s law.
Yeah that’s right. Hubble did not discover the
law until 1929. What happened was that Lemaître published it in French in a
low-impact journal (Annales de la Société Scientifique de Bruxelles),
while Hubble published it two years later in English in the Proceedings
of The National Academy of Sciences, received much more publicity and his
name got associated with the discovery.
Combined with Einstein’s cosmological
equation, Lemaître-Hubble’s law implies that the universe is expanding. In an
article published in 1931 in Nature, Lemaître drew the
consequence by proposing the Big Bang theory, so called in derision
by its opponent Fred Hoyle in 1950. The name caught on.
In 1948, Ralph Alpher, George Gamow and Robert
Herman made two surprising predictions, based on the Big Bang theory: the
average composition of the mass of the cosmos (three quarters hydrogen and one quarter
helium), and the existence of the cosmic background radiation. Both were confirmed during the sixties. From that point,
the Big Bang theory became the standard cosmological theory.