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steady-state theory
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steady-state theory

In astronomy, rival theory to that of the Big Bang, which claims that the universe has no origin but is expanding because new matter is being created continuously throughout the universe. The theory was proposed in 1948 by Austrian-born British cosmologist Hermann Bondi, Austrian-born US astronomer Thomas Gold, and English astronomer, cosmologist, and writer Fred Hoyle, but it was dealt a severe blow in 1965 by the discovery of cosmic background radiation (radiation left over from the Big Bang and the formation of the universe) and is now largely rejected.



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As Simon Singh points out in his fascinating chronicle "Big Bang: The Origin of the Universe," only a minority still hold with the Steady State theory.
They can not however, explain how or why this happened, and they have already dumped the steady state theory.
The stamps show images of two theories of creation - the Big Bang theory, and the steady state theory [that matter is continuously created at the rate of a few hundred atoms a year].
 
 
 
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