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I want to know ur toughts on this and I'm giving you the permission to be mean about my question..... i'll just turn the other cheek.

2007-12-31 06:33:00 · 16 answers · asked by GorillaBeast123 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

16 answers

There aren't 'two gasses' in the big bang theory. Read it and understand it before posting about it

2007-12-31 06:37:28 · answer #1 · answered by Sly Phi AM 7 · 4 1

The big bang theory does not include the mixing of two gases. It states that before the "bang" all the energy contained in the matter that makes up the universe was condensed into a singular point (like the singularity that exists at the bottom of a black hole).

2007-12-31 14:44:25 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The earliest phases of the Big Bang in the most common models, the universe was filled homogeneously and isotropically with an incredibly high energy density, huge temperatures and pressures, and was very rapidly expanding and cooling. Approximately 10−35 seconds into the expansion, a phase transition caused a cosmic inflation, during which the universe grew exponentially. After inflation stopped, the universe consisted of a quark-gluon plasma, as well as all other elementary particles. Temperatures were so high that the random motions of particles were at relativistic speeds, and particle-antiparticle pairs of all kinds were being continuously created and destroyed in collisions. At some point an unknown reaction called baryogenesis violated the conservation of baryon number, leading to a very small excess of quarks and leptons over antiquarks and anti-leptons—of the order of 1 part in 30 million. This resulted in the predominance of matter over antimatter in the present universe.

Meaning density, pressure and temperature (nothing) created the universe.

2007-12-31 14:44:05 · answer #3 · answered by Lukester 5 · 1 0

look it up. you ARE on the internet, you know. There is more education to be had here than in all the universities on the planet

2007-12-31 14:41:49 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

From a vacuous nothing can spring a positive and negative, which together equate to nothing. The spontaneous formation for this positive/negative 'nothing' would then cause a fantastic ripple of energy that exploded in what we call the big bang. This is only one theory, that needs more experimentation and investigation. The simple answer is that we don't have all the answers yet, and have to say 'I don't know'. Science does not rely on the childish cult answer of placing a supernatural deity as the explanation, it searches for real answers not imaginary ones.

2007-12-31 14:40:51 · answer #5 · answered by ibushido 4 · 2 0

the atmosphere, you know hat big old dark place out there. well there is and was gasses just floating cause wi no gas theres no atmosphere. i think ha ha. got me thinking now

2007-12-31 14:39:51 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

This is a BBC show about super string theory M, It is long but very interesting. See if you don't see room for God in the science?
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=4526010
Super-String Theory M-Theory Origin of the Universe"

2007-12-31 14:39:47 · answer #7 · answered by PROBLEM 7 · 0 0

We aren't sure where the original matter came from. The Big Bang Theory begins milliseconds after that matter came into being.

However, you get two gases from protons, neutrons, and electrons joined in different combinations. It's all the same materials, just put together in two different ways.

2007-12-31 14:38:57 · answer #8 · answered by Phoenix: Princess of Cupcakes 6 · 2 2

gasses out of nowhere? are you kidding? eat some beans!
talk about a big bang

2007-12-31 14:38:48 · answer #9 · answered by dddbbb 6 · 1 1

*Swish*
3 points nothin but net

2007-12-31 14:37:23 · answer #10 · answered by Art 4 · 0 3

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