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

If all the planets are in the universe and the universe was created by the big bang by a little atom where did the atom come from. was it part of something that was left behind of a blackhole or came from a blackhole?I wanna know where did the atom come from.

2007-04-24 14:46:58 · 9 answers · asked by kylesjohnson1 2 in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

how could a little particle,atom, or whatever thats been here so long and being the only thing make it explode

2007-04-24 14:51:54 · update #1

9 answers

Smaller than an atom. An atom was colossal compared to time frame and size that high energy physicists can calculate back to, known as the Planck Length, Planck Time, and Planck "Era" (who said physicists didn't have a sense of humor?).

Your black hole theory is worthy of consideration, since black holes are a very mysterious unknown quantity of our universe, right up there with dark matter. You might also want to Google "false vacuum", "scalar field", and "fuzzy factor at time zero" for some imaginative theorizing by people who hold a PhD in such things.

No Big Bang theorist every said the singularity that was and is our entire universe "exploded." That isa common misconception. Nobody is even saying that this "bang" was "big" or that anything "banged" at all. That is a term that detractors hung on the discovery that the universe could not possibly be standing still, a theory that Einstein himself had to come to accept. Einstein had to put in a "fudge factor" to his relativity equations to make the universe stand still. In retrospect, he said it was the biggest mistake of his life. Anyway, people derisively referred to it as the "Big Bang" theory, as a joke. Unfortunately, the name stuck.

What is really going on is that the EMPTY SPACE between all this high energy expanded. At first at an exponential rate far in excess of the speed of light (according to physicist Alan Guth and his Inflationary Theory). Space contiunues to expand, and the matter within it moves in this flow. This flow is referred to as the Hubble Flow, by the way. Because things are gravitationally bound to each other locally, and our own local group of galaxies is being drawn to large cluster of galaxies in the Constellation Virgo (the Virgo Cluster), the rate of expansion (true Hubble Flow) cannot even be measured until you get to maybe a billion light years distant.

Anyway, Inflation Theory dovetails well with the Big Bang hypothesis, and all further discoveries into this hypothesis have only served to confirm that cosmologists are on the right track. In contrast, the Steady State Theory (a static universe) has too many problems and has pretty much been discarded as a viable explanation.

One more note: Our Earth was NOT created "in the beginning." Our earth was created, along with our sun, from a later generation of stars. The physics of the Big Bang did not create any elements other than hydrogen, helium, and a bit of lithium. It was the nuclear fusion of stars created out of this mixture that created the heavier element abundance that we find on the earth, like silicon, carbon, and heavy minerals like gold. Gold had to have come from the molecular cloud of a supernova remnant.

2007-04-24 14:54:53 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Some current research has shown that in a vacuum, a particle and an anti-particle can simply pop into existence. This can happen without violating any natural laws because the mass and energy of the particle and anti-particle will cancel each other out.

Some speculate that a large incident of particles and anti-particles might have constituted the Big Bang. This doesn't imply that it happened with or without some deity. It simply happened. Without a god, it was simply a random event. With a god, it was caused. It really doesn't matter; the point is that it can happen, and it does happen on a small scale in laboratories. If it can happen now on a small scale, there would be nothing to prevent it from having happened at least once on a much larger scale.

2007-04-24 22:05:43 · answer #2 · answered by Deirdre H 7 · 0 0

Obviously you can't really answer this question without getting into a god/no god debate. The best answer that any scientist has given is that the atom that started it all could have been from an alternate universe. That atom could have come from, yes, a black hole

2007-04-24 21:51:00 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The composition of all life, including atoms and micro organisms, came out of the mind of God. The Holy Spirit moved over the plane of existence which we call the universe and created all things as authorized by God.

The Bible tells us that once all of the Sons and Daughters of God have been revealed (those who have accepted Jesus Christ in their hearts), God will "roll up" the universe and create a new heaven and a new earth which is free of sin.

2007-04-24 21:59:52 · answer #4 · answered by me m 2 · 0 1

Nobody has figured that one out yet, maybe you can be the first. Study hard and take every math and science sourse you can get your hands on and maybe someday you can hang out with the science nerds and geeks and come up with a ground-breaking cosmological theory to explain the existence of the universe! The leading candidate at present is something called 'M' theory. I don't pretend to understand it, but what little I can fathom is fascinating.

2007-04-24 22:07:01 · answer #5 · answered by eggman 7 · 0 0

It makes no difference what anybody around here tries to tell you there is absolutely no answer to your question. Nobody...repeat, NOBODY...knows what caused our universe to come into existence. Same answer when folks ask what's outside the universe.

2007-04-24 21:52:24 · answer #6 · answered by Chug-a-Lug 7 · 2 0

In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.

2007-04-24 21:57:42 · answer #7 · answered by qwerty 4 · 0 3

Not an atom, a "singularity."

In any case, whatever it was, the answer to your question is: it's always been here.

2007-04-24 21:49:38 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 4

GOD

2007-04-24 21:49:08 · answer #9 · answered by ronald p 1 · 0 3

fedest.com, questions and answers