Lost video interview with ‘father of Big Bang theory’ recovered

Lost video interview with ‘father of Big Bang theory’ recovered

Belgium - A 20-minute video interview with the father of the Big Bang theory, Belgian Catholic priest and physicist Georges Lemaître, thought to be lost was recovered by European broadcast network VRT.

The full recording in French, originally aired on Feb. 14, 1964, with only a short excerpt preserved. The opening question was not recorded and was likely asked by journalist Jerome Verhaeghe in his introduction live in the studio.


In the video, Lemaître discusses the beginnings of the universe and his “hypothesis of the primeval atom,” the idea that our universe expanded from a single point. This concept, which Lemaître first proposed in 1931, evolved into the Big Bang theory now widely accepted by cosmologists.

“Of all the people who came up with the framework of cosmology that we’re working with now, there’s very few recordings of how they talked about their work,” said Satya Gontcho A Gontcho, a scientist at the Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). “To hear the turns of phrase and how things were discussed…It feels like peeking through time.”

Gontcho A Gontcho partnered with two researchers at the Vatican Observatory, Jean-Baptiste Kikwaya Eluo and Paul Gabor, to make the Lemaître video more accessible. The interview was conducted in French and aired with Flemish subtitles. The English translation (led by Gontcho A Gontcho) and French transcription are now available in a paper on the arXiv, an open-access collection of scientific articles.

“Lemaître and others gave us the mathematical framework that forms the basis of our current efforts to understand our universe,” said Gontcho A Gontcho, who works on the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). In particular, scientists want to understand dark matter, the skeleton of our universe, and dark energy, which is making it expand faster and faster.

“Cosmology is trying to understand what happened in the universe’s past – and for most of us who do observations, that means measuring, very precisely, the rate of acceleration of the universe at different moments in time,” Gontcho A Gontcho said. “And if you understand how the universe has expanded at different moments in time, then you’re able to narrow down what dark energy could be.”
-BerkleyLab

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