English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If all the mass+energy was in the same point at the bigining, how it can expanded? Does it means that THE BIGGEST BLACK HOLE can explode?

2007-03-07 04:35:17 · 11 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

11 answers

A black hole is so many orders of magnitude smaller than the big bang that they can't even be compared. It has nothing to do with "why" the big bang occurred.

We don't know how the big bang happened, all of our physics break down because the 4 fundamental forces we know of were one before the big bang. If we could figure out how they separated and what it was like before they did, we might have the answer to that.

As for the biggest black hole exploding, we believe that they can decay, but it takes like 10^66 years to happen.

How about this though. A black hole punches through the space-time continuum to create a "white hole" somewhere else, where matter is gushing out (like at the big bang)

Chew on that for a while.

2007-03-07 05:08:30 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The big bang was quite different from a black hole.

For one thing, all of the forces of nature were of similar magnitude, and were probably indistinguishable. It was not until later (a very tiny fraction of a second later) that the universe cooled enough for the symmetries that united these forces to break, and the universe to start to settle down to the way it is now.

Mathematically, the description of the big bang - though still a solution to the field equations of general relativiy - is quite different. It is a stable expanding metric solution.

PS could the god squad please crawl back under their rock and try not to dribble too much - they clearly know not a thing about the science and could certainly not explain who created god, say. It is interesting that the originator of the big bang theory was, in fact, a catholic priest - so I suspect its them and not their religion that has the problem.

2007-03-07 12:48:26 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

If all the universe can contract again to a singularity, it may again explode, inflate and start a next big bang. The black holes are just miniature singularities. A lot more needs to be studied about them.

2007-03-07 12:39:13 · answer #3 · answered by Swamy 7 · 0 0

but the thing about black holes is... they still haven't been proven to exist. they're still just another theory just like the big bang. no one has actually observed a black hole yet so they might not even be real. no one really knows if the big bang really happened or not either.

2007-03-07 12:38:12 · answer #4 · answered by scolex89 3 · 0 0

Scientist are now saying that the big bang was caused by to parallel universes clashing with each other.

2007-03-07 12:44:16 · answer #5 · answered by Trinisoccer 5 · 0 0

Our current understanding of gravity breaks down at a singularity, so no one really knows what happens at these points.

2007-03-07 12:59:43 · answer #6 · answered by Tim 4 · 1 0

It just did. There's no knowing why anything even exists, when it could just as easily not exist, eh?

2007-03-07 12:38:36 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

That's easy-there was no big bang, without anyone causing one. IOW-God said "let there be light, and BANG!, it happened.

Genesis 1:3
And God said, Let there be light: and there was light.

2007-03-07 12:41:04 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Because the big bang didn't happen...... God pulled that one off.

2007-03-07 12:38:09 · answer #9 · answered by Steve 3 · 0 2

I cant believe people are still trying to make that work.

God created the heavens & the earth.

Theres no scientific way around it.

2007-03-07 12:44:25 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

fedest.com, questions and answers