I can see why your post was closed as too broad and I agree with it. I also think there is a little bit of unclearness as well. First your title:
How did we get the different values used in MurmurHash3? How does it guarantee low collision? What is the mathematics behind it?
That's three different questions. It doesn't seem to me that they are really different, as they could all be related and answering one will answer the other two as well, but it raises a red flag. Then we have:
I have googled about MurmurHash3, seen both the pseudo code and the page of the author. Both the pages explain what the algorithm does but not how the algorithm works.
My response to this is: "Okay the guy wants to know how the algorithm works." Instead, you then say:
The intent of my question "how did we get the different values used in MurmurHash3" is not how it was generated but why those methods of generation were chosen and how it guarantees a low collision intuitively explained.
So, now I'm left to think that you don't care how the algorithm works, but you want to know why the implementer chose to implement it the way he did. Someone out there might know the reason, but without the implementer saying why, IMHO the answers would all be guesses. That to me makes a vote-to-close as too broad totally acceptable.
You then finish with:
Its fairly easy to understand what is being done but not why it is being done.
This again reaffirms at least to me, that you want to know why the implementer chose to implement it the way he did.
This may not be what you meant it to be, but that is how I interpret it and in the end that is what it boils down to, the interpretation of the question by the reader.