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13 answers

Turn your FM radio on. Tune between the stations. Or set a TV between channels. The hash you hear and see is partially the radio equivalent of the "sound" that the big bang made. (Some of the noise is internally generated.)

2006-10-04 23:33:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Big Bang theory is preposterous! When I was initially taught the theory, it was postulated that the universe was filled with difuse hydrogen atoms. That these atoms were attracted to each other by gravity until at the center of the universe there was this huge mass of hydrogen atoms under immense heat and pressure. Then, as in a hydrogen bomb, fusion took place, but instead of the hydrogen atoms fusing into helium atoms, the hydrogen atoms fused into all of the atoms in the periodic table of elements. Right! Hello! What a joke! The mathematic probability of that is so close to zero, that it is zero!

To add insult to injury, this entire theory is dependent on Newtonian Physics, which posits that there is something called gravity, which causes all matter to be attracted to other matter. The trouble with that is that Einstein's theory of Relativity was proved correct in 1967!

Einsteinian Physics says that there is no such thing as gravity, there is no inherent quality of matter to be attracted to other matter. It states that planets revolve around the Sun because space is curved! This being the case, if the universe was originally filled with difuse hydrogen atoms, that they would not have been attracted to each other. Oh, maybe, some of the atoms may have grouped together in small clumps, but no great central mass of atoms, and NO BIG BANG!

Of course, no physist has ever postulated where these hydrogen atoms ever came from. After all, even though a hydrogen atom is the simplest naturally occuring piece of matter, it is still quite complicated.

All of these impossible theories to explain how the universe as it is came to be; just to evade the possibility that there is a God, and that God created all there is.

2006-10-05 03:34:26 · answer #2 · answered by Smartassawhip 7 · 0 1

Sound is the vibration of air molecules. Molecules formed during the actual event. Answer = No sound .

The expansion is still going on, so if there was air,
It would still be making noise.
Recent theories suggest that the expansion happened faster than the speed of light. Sound of course moves slower. Keep listening you may yet hear it.

2006-10-05 03:10:59 · answer #3 · answered by Red 5 · 0 1

The sound was APOCALYPTIC! certain things never existed because of the sound! Is it just me or is the arrogant fellow two above me, who I believe just copied and pasted, a little full of his own sense of worth? But the guy in the stripe shirt said it truly better than anyone else.

2006-10-05 04:36:06 · answer #4 · answered by Casca 4 · 0 0

it didn't made any sound because the big bang was not an explosion but an expansion.the universe is still expanding under the same laws but it is not exploding.

2006-10-05 04:14:22 · answer #5 · answered by salehm 1 · 0 0

There was no atmosphere.. hence, no sound. Imagine the surface of a sphere reduced to a point... that was the entire universe.

Answers that suggest that sound doesn't travel in a vacuum are correct, but irrelevant... there was no vacuum. The universe itself was only a point in 4 physical dimensions.

2006-10-05 02:59:35 · answer #6 · answered by Thomas C 3 · 0 1

there are limited sound waves in a vacuum, and there were no ears to hear it, so I imagine it was really very quiet. but every sound that has ever been made since then has come from that bang, and if you could hear every sound ever made all at once, let's just say,without assigning any specific numbers to it, that it would be loud enough to pulverize your head into particulate matter.

2006-10-05 02:55:33 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Well, since sound doesn't travel in a vacuum, and the bigbang probably occurred at beyond the speed of sound, then I would assume that there was no sound., except within the masses themselves. But since sound originates within mass as simply a vibration, and then there was probably no real sound. I'm sure the bigbang was bigger than it's sound.

2006-10-05 02:55:44 · answer #8 · answered by Rockstar 6 · 1 2

Louder than the sound the tree made when it fell in the forest where no one was there to hear it.

2006-10-05 02:52:34 · answer #9 · answered by tenaciousd 6 · 0 1

Sound is not transmitted in the void, so I guess there was no sound.

2006-10-05 02:59:59 · answer #10 · answered by cpinatsi 7 · 0 0

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