| The <!g>Big Bang as Scientific FactUnlike some of the other contributors to this 
volume, I have the luxury of dealing with a well defined topic for which a 
great deal of hard data are available. 
My charge is to argue why a reasonable person should accept the Big Bang 
as proven scientific fact. In his recent book Before the Beginning, the British <!g>cosmologist Sir Martin Rees wrote that he was “fairly sure” of the 
Big Bang - at the 90% level. Actually, I suspect that Martin was being a bit 
coy, for in fact it is impossible to do any constructive research in cosmology 
today without standing firmly on the Big Bang model. Most cosmologists, I 
suspect - I among them - would side with the famous Russian cosmologist Jakob 
Zeldovich, who said in 1982, “I am as sure of the Big Bang as I am that the 
Earth goes around the Sun”.  My task is specifically to motivate and 
defend the Big Bang model, but what exactly do I mean by the “Big Bang”? In what follows I take a narrow definition 
of the Big Bang as a moment in the finite past at which our Universe had very 
high density and (as explained later) a very high temperature. This claim is concrete, and the evidence for 
it is overwhelming. In defining the Big 
Bang so narrowly, I am deliberately sidestepping such broader questions as, did 
the Universe begin with the Big Bang? 
Did space and time begin with the Big Bang? What came before the Big 
Bang? These and other harder questions will be the topic of later chapters in 
this volume - I have the easy job of setting the stage. Contributed by: Dr. <!g>Sandra Faber |