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30 answers

We will find all that out in our next life. If we knew everytning know then what would be the point in believing in something higher...

2006-09-05 03:04:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Well, i think that ethious are usually the best to answer those questions , but anyways, if scientists tries to explain what happened before the big bang it will no longer be science but religion, because even though they have mentioned some sort of a black hole,and gas someone had to initiate that black whole, whether this whole is tangible or abstractable to be able to form the big bang.
I believe that God intiated the big bang and also created the law of physics, so that everything in nature could followed that same law, if that wasn't the case, the law of probability would probably have placed the strastophere, the ionosphere in the ozone layer into another sphere or somewhere else, because hypothetically speaking I don't think that the ozone layer would be placed exactly where it is, so that the sun would not destroy us all.

2006-09-05 04:39:47 · answer #2 · answered by Halal Pig Ok in Islam 4 · 0 0

The current state of our knowledge of physics does not allow us to understand the state of the Universe all the way back to the Big Bang, but it does come really close---most of the events in the early Universe a microsecond or longer after the Big Bang are explainable by physics. As to earlier times, and the time before the Big Bang, the fact that we can't explain it now does not necessarily mean that it is supernatural. It is possible that improved theories of physics will extend our understanding back to the causes of the Big Bang and before.

Speculation is that a "Big Bang" may be a rare natural occurance---in empty space, it is possible that a "Big Bang" happens because of quantum fluctuations every once in a long, long while (more than a google years). In that case, it is possible that the larger Universe existed "forever", and that many Big Bang-type "sub-Universes" have existed (and will exist) within it.

2006-09-05 08:13:26 · answer #3 · answered by cosmo 7 · 0 0

Honestly, I believe God created it

However, as a Big Bang theorist explained it to me, the Law of Conservation of mass (matter can be neither created nor destroyed) did not apply before the existence of matter because it is a law of this universe, and the universe had not yet existed. that or the law was broken. They conflict on the answer. Look at my last question for anything else.

2006-09-05 03:10:17 · answer #4 · answered by Spelunking Spork 4 · 0 0

The previous universe.

The projected end of the universe happens when it stops expanding, and begins to collapse back in on itself, called "The Big Crunch" - imaginative, eh? So when this happens, all the matter will once again form a super-dense unit - such as before the Big Bang - and the cycle starts over.

2006-09-05 04:03:07 · answer #5 · answered by el_jonson 2 · 1 0

before the big bang, there was just space and some gases. However, a black hole came into place and negative pressure on the gases started to build up. Soon the pressure was too much and resulted into the BIG BANG!

2006-09-05 03:16:20 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The big bang was all the matter in the universe exploding.

At the moment the universe is very hot and its expanding. Eventually it will cool down and start to contract.
Eventually all the matter will return to the same place and it will happen all over again.

Just don't expect it to happen very soon!

2006-09-05 03:10:34 · answer #7 · answered by wally_zebon 5 · 1 0

Physics is science and works with theories that can be disproved. The big bang is as far as physics can go. If you want any old answer, you have to go to religion.

2006-09-05 03:10:22 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

the big bang happened due to that thing that exploded was becoming smaller with a bigger mass that a piece just like ur hand could weight tons
thats why it happened

2006-09-05 04:16:38 · answer #9 · answered by amr banawan 2 · 0 0

it involves black holes, singularities and nothing. But it is so mind bending it makes your eyes water trying to get your head around it. Plus, even the scientists aren't that sure.

2006-09-05 03:14:55 · answer #10 · answered by meep meep!! 3 · 0 0

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