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Let us think about that for a minute or so. It must have taken a lot energy for that to have happenned. this is really more than one question. what made everything come together? why didn't the particules continue going far apart. If gravity was strong enough to stop it than won't it been strong enough to stop it before it even got started?

2007-09-22 10:13:44 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Physics

4 answers

Which Big Band? Brian Setzer Orchestra? That doesn't violate any law of physics.

Or do you mean Big Bang?

It is very well established that the universe was once (14 billion years ago, give or take) much, much, much smaller and much, much, much hotter than it is now. It is still expanding and cooling.

But how it got that way is still something we're working on. That's really about as good an answer to your question as you can get although I'm sure someone who doesn't know what they are talking about will bring up string theories and many dimensions and quantum fluctuations and lots of stuff like that.

2007-09-22 10:18:27 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The singularity of the big bang could not be classified by any physical laws because the only thing that existed was energy, there was no gravity or mass. The laws of physics were not violated, they did not come into existence until the first particles formed some 600.000 years later.

2007-09-26 08:04:31 · answer #2 · answered by johnandeileen2000 7 · 0 0

If you mean the Big Bang, it violates the known laws of physics only if you extrapolate as far as, or farther than, a singularity. Read the reference for a superb summary of theories of the early universe, and how other forces competed with gravity. The various theories still considered today have been studied enough to find them consistent with known science, though we still don't know which of these, if any, are true.

2007-09-22 17:57:45 · answer #3 · answered by Frank N 7 · 1 0

you could consider that the universe pulsates; expands to a certain size the collapse in on itself when gravity proves to be too much and restart the process. but to consider where it all came from and how it began would probably have to consider the activity of a god which is a suggest for philosophy.

2007-09-22 12:03:02 · answer #4 · answered by *_superhands_* 4 · 0 1

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