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And in this, the light came from the primordial plasma, so that's what the CMB is. And the temperature would have been about the same everywhere, one part about 100,000, 2.7 to 257 K to about 2.7 to 63 Kelvin. So anywhere you look, it just kind of ranges in between that. So the temperature was just about perfect. In the standard bang model, there exists no reason why the plasma, billions of light-years apart, should be the same temperature all across the sky. For anything to come in to the same temperature everywhere, it needs to be in contact for a period of time. So like a warm cup of tea or a bowl of soup, it will come into room temperature at some point in time because that bowl of soup is in contact with the air around it. That's not the same correlation with the big bang in the singularity, the original singularities of infinite areas density and time difference, etc.

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