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The Big Bang was taken place everywhere. The specialists of astronomy told it, a couple of days ago, in Finnish broadcast.

If so - where does this Big Bang expand, if it happened everywhere in the universe? A detonation into what?

2007-02-17 08:41:42 · 12 answers · asked by silberstein_9 3 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

12 answers

It's a difficult concept to comprehend, but apparently space expands along with the matter which composes the universe. There presumably was nothing before the cosmos erupted from a naked singularity; from that point both the material which composes the universe and space which surrounds it expanded simultaneously... I imagine that if one could somehow travel to the edge of the universe, he or she would hit a wall!! Such ideas are exciting to consider, impossible to grasp (unless one happens to be an astrophysicist, I suppose). The farther one looks out into space, the farther one is seeing back into time, so that you are never viewing anything that is real!

2007-02-17 09:02:33 · answer #1 · answered by Lynci 7 · 1 0

i like this topic.... about the big bang scientists said that our universe has been made by the big bang and that it will continue to eaxpand for ever....... universe will expand not the big bang..
they also say that universe depends on a single digit ... i dont know the details alot.. but a single change in the value and we all doomed .... rising the saying ( disteny hangs ona digit).

2007-02-17 08:50:09 · answer #2 · answered by goku 2 · 0 0

i hate to tell you this but the big bang is a myth and this is evidenced by galixy collisions.in a big bang all matter goes outward from a center point wich means only one direction of travel-outward. for a galixy to colide with another one galixy must do a 180 dergee turn before it hit this event would take billions of billions of light years and a intense gravitational force to compleate add to this the distance from us that collision occured and thats even more light years. big bangers think the universe is only 13.8 billion years old wich is not enough time for this event to occure and be witnessed by us.

2007-02-21 04:59:41 · answer #3 · answered by Tony N 3 · 1 0

All the planets and stars are perpetualy moving therefore some are moving outwards so causing planetary systems to move further apart and that is why the universe is expanding

2007-02-18 00:43:08 · answer #4 · answered by fidtec 1 · 0 0

The Big bang (or so it is theorized) was simply a supermassive black hole breaking down. our universe is expanding into open space, that is, space that is currently unoccupied. Eventually, the universe will collapse again into another supermassive black hole and go through the cycle again.

2007-02-17 10:56:41 · answer #5 · answered by Jake 1 · 0 0

It doesn't expand into anywhere. The anywhere is what's doing the expanding.

It's impossible for us to understand, because our brains haven't evolved to deal with advanced physics, but simple things like whether that shadow is a lion or not.

2007-02-17 08:45:27 · answer #6 · answered by Daniel R 6 · 1 0

It expanded into nothingness. There's actually nothing to say about it because it's just nothing. In fact, we can't really even be talking about it as nothing because it really doesn't exist, so by trying to explain it you try to make it exist when it really doesn't. So the answer to your question is no answer. I really should have just left this answer blank and it would've been the best answer you could get.

2007-02-17 08:46:41 · answer #7 · answered by Chris S 3 · 1 0

nothing ( I'll let someone else give you the theories to account for this but no matter how hard they try the end result is still nothing )

my brain can deal with it just fine - there is nothing but the universe and as it gets bigger it creates a larger universe( it's the start that i can't deal with )

2007-02-17 08:46:22 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

our universe expands from and to our own perceptions. to be specific, right in the middle of my hypothalamus, and yours, and well everone elses. the expansion is quite multidimentional, kinda curves into itself and back again.

well really i have no idea what i'm talking about but it sounded good!

2007-02-17 08:48:47 · answer #9 · answered by carol anne 5 · 0 0

No one is quite sure but there are some science poeple that say that its quite far and away a bit. too close to call, get back to me on that one ok?

2007-02-17 09:09:47 · answer #10 · answered by steve h 2 · 0 0

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