English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

referring to the vacume in outter space,viod of any gases or minerals.what is the first thing that would be produced.to start the creations in space such as gases up to stars then planets.

2006-07-02 22:48:47 · 4 answers · asked by largopirate 1 in Science & Mathematics Earth Sciences & Geology

4 answers

energy

without energy, there isn't any matter

as t (universal reference)--->0, the laws of physics tend to break down, but there is reason to believe that much of the universe began in a form not greatly dissimilar from its present form.

in other words, at the instant of the big bang, the universe was created from apparent nothingness, and sometime thereabouts, the universe was filled with a combination of energy and plasma and solids, liquids and gases.

i don't think any cosmological model (cosmology has not yet found one model it thinks is accurate) identifies the order in which the universe was filled -- or, for that matter (no pun intended), whether the "filler" came first and the universe later enveloped it.

the origin of the universe was attended by a staggeringly huge release of energy -- but the "best" scientific theories thus far produced all sound like a revision of the old "ether in the upper atmosphere" theory regarding the propagation of radio waves on earth.

the real truth is that science doesn't have much in the way of credible cosmological answers, and nothing can be said with scientific certainty regarding the origin of the universe. However, if you bring up the topic, you will find an overabundance of insecure people on both sides of the theological issue, each wanting to convince you that his or her position is the absolute scientific truth of the matter.

Real scientists have open minds, and they're not afraid to say "I don't know."

2006-07-02 22:57:16 · answer #1 · answered by wireflight 4 · 2 2

Well, nothing, if you want to look at it from that perspective.
It takes energy to create stars and planets and that energy can not come from the void. Matter must have already been around to make this happen. That's why the Big Bang is a widely accepted theory. It was a single, massive, highly energetic event that deposited all the mass into this vacuum you speak of that gave rise to stars, planets, galaxies, and nebulae.

2006-07-03 05:55:01 · answer #2 · answered by figaro1912 3 · 0 0

Elementary particles and their anti particles. No doubt.

2006-07-03 09:29:02 · answer #3 · answered by Thermo 6 · 0 0

well for a start we are here.

2006-07-03 05:51:31 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers