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If you find the answer to this question, you will win a Nobel Prize for physics...

Science so far has only been able to model what happened up to a few milliseconds after the Big Bang. The problem is that at the instant the Big Bang occurred you've got all the energy and mass in one "singularity" or point of infinite density. The laws of physics as we know them break down at this point, so it's hard to calculate what was going on at the instant of the Big Bang.

And there's absolutely no telling what went on before the Big Bang as the universe essentially did not exist before the Big Bang! It's wierd to think about...

Essentially, everything seemed to be created out of nothing. Light from darkness.

"And God said, 'Let there be light,' and there was light."

2007-02-06 16:19:12 · answer #1 · answered by Yamson 3 · 0 0

i think the primordial soup is another theory of the origin of the universe..

big bang:: a big bang resulted from a strong interaction inside a gas cloud.. According to the big bang, the universe was created sometime between 10 billion and 20 billion years ago from a cosmic explosion that hurled matter and in all directions. and that hurled matter resulted into stars and planets and you know whats

primordial soup:: have u seen that cow and chicken episode where they were in some desert looking place and there was a basin of liquid? hehe. it was supposed to be the primordial soup..
but seriously:
The Primordial Soup Theory suggest that life began in a pond or ocean as a result of the combination of chemicals from the atmosphere and some form of energy to make amino acids, the building blocks of proteins, which would then evolve into all the species.

The Primordial Soup Theory states that Life began in a warm pond/ocean from a combination of chemicals that forms amino acids, which then make proteins. This is suppose to happen at least 3.8 billion to 3.55 billion years ago.

hehe. :) hope i helped

2007-02-07 00:25:43 · answer #2 · answered by mia saunders 2 · 0 0

Once upon a time, 20 billions of years ago, all matter
(all elementary particles and all quarks and
their girlfriends- antiparticles and antiquarks,
all kinds of waves: electromagnetic, gravitational,
muons… gluons field ….. etc.) – was assembled in a “single point”.
It is interesting to think about what had surrounded the “single point”.
The answer is :
EMPTINESS- NOTHING….!!!
Ok!
But why does everyone speak about EMPTINESS- NOTHING in
common phrases rather than in specific, concrete terms?
I wonder why nobody has written down this EMPTINESS- NOTHING in
the form of a physical formula ? You see, every schoolboy knows that
is possible to express the EMPTINESS- NOTHING condition
by the formula T=0K.
* * *
Once there was a “Big Bang”.
But in what space had the Big Bang taken place
and in what space was the matter of the Big Bang distributed?
Not in T=0K?
It is clear, that there is only EMPTINESS, NOTHING, in T=0K.
Now consider that the Universe, as an absolute frame of reference is
in a condition of T = 2,7K (rests relic radiation of the Big Bang ).
But, the relic radiation is extended and in the future will change and decrease.
What temperature can this radiation reach?
Not T=0K?
Hence, if we go into the past or into the present or into the future,
we can not escape from EMPTINESS- NOTHING T=0K.
Therefore it is necessary to begin to think from T=0K.
===== ========
About the theory of the “Big Bang” is written the thick (very thick) books.
But anywhere do not write about the reason of the “Big Bang”.
Anybody does not know it.
I know.
Action, when the God opens his palm,
have named the “Big Bang”.
And action, when the God compresses his palm,
have named " a single point”.
===========================
http://www.socratus.com

2007-02-09 09:45:44 · answer #3 · answered by socratus 2 · 0 0

The soup came from photons which were scattering continuously,
Light was coupled to the particles, causing the whole universe to glow. This is the stage that scientists like to call the primordial soup because the universe looked like a plasma "soup" of protons, electrons, neutrons, neutrinos, photons, etc.

2007-02-07 00:31:15 · answer #4 · answered by Albertan 6 · 0 0

OK. One theory involves virtual particles. Virtual particles are particles that appear and disappear before they have time to have any influence on the universe. They exist even in a vacuum. They know they exist because scientists have added enough energy to a vacuum to allow the particles to stay around long enough to show up on detectors. It is mathematically possible that one of these virtual particles appeared with enough energy to make the universe we see today.

What that boils down to is that our universe may have come from a vacuum (in other words, nothing) to spontaneously explode in the big bang. Which also means there could be other universes that came into existence like ours but without any connection to us.

2007-02-07 00:29:06 · answer #5 · answered by Twizard113 5 · 0 0

The "soup" on earth came after the Big Bang, and there aren't enough hours for me to explain it to you.... Google it.

2007-02-07 00:20:40 · answer #6 · answered by April 6 · 0 1

Ummm...The current theory is that there are several universes and they are like membranes. The collisions of the membranes caused the big bang.

2007-02-07 00:20:33 · answer #7 · answered by nicewknd 5 · 0 0

I believe life came to this planet on an astroid like the mars rock with bacteria found

2007-02-07 00:20:06 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

There is no exact answer to it.
Cyclic universe, that is big bang, big crunch, big bang, etc, could be the answer.
Maybe, it is a situation of multiverse.

2007-02-07 12:42:49 · answer #9 · answered by chanljkk 7 · 0 0

It was created by the explosion, which was the beginning of space, time, and all matter. Beyond that, we cannot now go.

2007-02-07 00:44:48 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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