The Big Bang probably followed a Big Crunch. If you're wondering where all the mass and energy came from, the answer is that we really don't know. I suppose that it all needed a point of origin. It would seem as if it needed to be "created" at some point or another. Who or what was that creator? Was it God?
2007-02-12 08:53:52
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answer #1
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answered by Clean Independent Energy 3
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once you get to questions like this, the problem is that human understanding fails. so some distance. we've not advanced our analytical concepts to the point the position we may be able to make certain what got here about in the previous the tremendous Bang; certainly, fairly some scientists experience that the note 'in the previous' has no authentic context the following, because time did not exist in the previous the tremendous Bang, no longer in our uncreated universe besides. besides the undeniable fact that, there are fairly some suggestions going round, and with any success faster or later we will be in a position to inspect them sufficient to educate one or the different. yet it is the psychological seize that the more beneficial belligerent theists attempt to spring on us; they assume that considering we can not understand, then through definition it must be an eternal god that did it, and oftentimes the god of their personal faith, besides the undeniable fact that there is quite no logical rationalization why it must be THAT god. the completed aspect is an argument from lack of expertise and it basically would not stand. If we may be able to assert that there grow to be an beginning of each and everything, there continues to be no logical reason to settle for that the beginning grow to be a sentient being of omnipotent potential, because each and everything we've discovered about the universe so some distance has had no want for sentience to implement it. So at the same time as in the present day we can not unequivocally say that there grow to be no longer a sentient author, the steadiness of odds is that there would not want to be.
2016-12-04 02:27:54
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Well To look at this problem we need to trace time backwards to when the universe was tiny. I could be completely wrong (which would be bad because I have a physics exam coming up) but I believe that it was proven that space (distance) and time are relative (cue first possible mistake). If this is so then as we trace the universes expansion back further and further time will act much differently until we go back to the very instant the big bang occured when all matter was a tiny messy soup of unknown stuff contained within the smallest of spaces. as this distance is so infinitely small, and nothing is contained outside of this, time will be travelling infinitely slower (or faster whichever one it is, that could be my second mistake) and so time kind of stretches out (or compresses inwards) exponentially until you might as well just accept that time becomes completely negligible. Then you raise the question "did the universe have a start?" because this theory states that time just drags its self out further and further and never reaches a beginning, similar to the graph of y=k to the power of x where the curve will get closer and closer to a point but never reach it. So yeah theres my opinion... the big bang didn't originate from anywhere it was just a messy soup. Get ready to fail me Mr W.
2007-02-13 10:56:04
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The Big Bang *was* the origin. There was no time before the big bang. Origins imply that there was something that went or existed before; with the big bang there was *no* "before".
If you are asking where the *theory* of the big bang originated, that is a separate question. Big Bang cosmology comes from the Friedmann-Lemaître Robertson-Walker metric, which is an exact solution of the Einstein field equations of general relativity; it describes a homogeneous, isotropic expanding or contracting universe.
2007-02-12 08:28:41
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answer #4
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answered by Jerry P 6
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The best explanation of the origins of the universe, i.e how the big bang happened, currently comes from a highly esoteric theory in physics called "M Theory". The best explanation of this that I've seen in laymans terms was an article on the BBC website in 2001 which is still available here - http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1270726.stm
Hope this helps
2007-02-12 23:58:39
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answer #5
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answered by Spacephantom 7
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thats the thing ..it didnt ...you cant create something out of nothing..doesn't make any sense..basically if you get answers to this questions always ask 'ok so where did that originate from also'
energy can not be created or destroyed...hence the big band cant just have come out of nothing...
i don't think it happened...because that will be sugesting the big bang happened and then we evolved from loads of particles.... 'ok where did the particles come from' ...the big bang '''ok where did the big bang come from' ....errrrrr hmmm
plus how can we evolve from particles? lol
This might help ...this is some info on the big bang theory
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_bang
2007-02-15 00:22:35
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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The Big Bang occurred everywhere. It had no centre just as the universe has no centre. The Big Bang was an expansion of space and time and the expansion continues.
2007-02-12 08:46:31
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answer #7
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answered by tentofield 7
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You know, I've wondered the same thing, and of course there is no definite answer to that question. It's just one of those mysteries in life we can't solve. If you're the religious type, you can just say that God created the Big Bang.
2007-02-12 11:17:21
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answer #8
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answered by DavidausZueri 3
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until the universe came into being there was no space, hence there was no "where" for the big bang to erm bang into. Space was created with the big bang along with time
2007-02-12 23:44:03
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answer #9
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answered by bignob 1
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There was no where or when to it.
The Big Bang was the beginning of there being a 'where' and of there being a 'when'.
Pretty big bang huh?
2007-02-12 09:13:09
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answer #10
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answered by Justin 5
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