Science is trending across the cosmos [1] in 2014. This week comes the news that scientists have detected gravitational waves [2] from the Big Bang, the event that created the universe. The report from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics [3] shows evidence for these ripples in space-time, or as scientists have described it, "the first tremors of the Big Bang."
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The gravitational waves prove the theory of inflation, the idea that the universe went from something microscopically small to an infinitely large cosmos in a fraction of a second [4]. This groundbreaking finding was part of the Background Imaging of Cosmic Extragalactic Polarization 2 (BICEP2) telescope based in the South Pole, which observed the "faint glow left over from the Big Bang." [5]
Today, Stanford University released this heartwarming video of Chao-Lin Kuo, coleader of the BICEP2 project and an assistant professor of physics at the school, surprising professor Andrei Linde at home to tell him the news. It's a notable visit as Linde was one of the physicists to refine the inflation theory in the 1980s, and the news from the Harvard-Smithsonian team essentially validates his life's work.

Linde's wife, Renata Kallosh, a theoretical physicist, was by his side when he learned the jaw-dropping discovery. Though the video is loaded with physics jargon, even the non-scientifically minded can appreciate the thrilled look on the physicists' faces when they learn the reason for Kuo's visit.