How was the Big Bang started?
Edit 1: What started as a b8 post turned into a miracle as the commenters are discussing topics such as religion and science without going at each other's throats.
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[url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ImvlS8PLIo&feature=youtu.be&t=19m48s]Because virtual particles pop in and out of existence all the time in what we call "nothing".[/url]
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The Big Foreplay
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If there was nothing then how was god made
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Ever think maybe God caused the Big Bang?
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Why don't you ask CERN
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http://www.dailydot.com/geek/big-bang-theory-universe-may-have-existed-forever/ The big bang could be wrong. The universe might not have a starting point.
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Infinity is hard to grasp. There may be no beginning and no end.
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My idea of it is what's zero times zero? Still zero right. Just like the universe, nothing plus nothing is still nothing. So where did it come from then? Unless, there are finite chances. And the chance that nothing in the universe combined with nothing are actually possible because you have finite tries. But this is negated by the idea of 0*infinity is still zero. Soooo...?
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I dunno who gives a -blam!-?
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Gr8 b8 m8
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The problem is... There was something, a singular extremely fence and compact atom. Do your research first before making a stupid post like this 1- atheists 0- religion
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Its complicated...maybe too complicated for your brain to wrap around.
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Chuck Norris -blam!-ed mrs. god
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I think the answer to this would literally give us brain damage. I'm not using the term "literally" lightly at all.
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We don't know. There's several theories. One says God started it. Another says probability always exists, so regardless of how inconceivable it is an entire universe could have sprung out of nothing, it [i]had[/i] to happen eventually. I follow 'brane theory. Essentially this: According to String Theory our universe exists in more than the 4 dimensions we are aware of. Depending on the particular version of String Theory it can be anywhere between 5 and several hundred, although the 5 more popular versions all say 10 or 11. We can't see or interact with them, because they're either very small, or curled. This 11 dimensional plane is known as a membrane, or 'brane. Many versions of 'brane theory suggest that there are an infinite number of 'branes, stacked one on top each other, like sheets of paper in a stack. The 'branes oscillate, or vibrate. Once every few billion billion years two 'branes collide, unleashing a massive amount of energy into both 'branes. It's this energy that kickstarted the Big Bang. On the quantum level matter and energy are the same thing, and pretty much all models of the early universe (Pre CMB) have matter condensing from energy as the universe expanded and cooled.
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Loominarti?
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it never was disappears
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No religion in offtopic
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We don't know.
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By all the nothing in the universe exploding with the force of something you'd compare giant fućking explosions to
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no Noiselesspurse? aww..
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There was energy before the Big Bang, according to the theory
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One interesting thought I had, and I've yet to find any information on it, is the merger of space expansion and quantum physics. Quarks, the particles that compose protons and neutrons, interact through the strong nuclear force. What's interesting about this force is that its strength decreases as a factor of range, rather than range squared like gravity or electromagnetism. This means that, if you were to pull apart two quarks, you'd eventually add enough energy to the strong force that there'd be enough energy in the bond to create a quark-antiquark pair rather than increasing the range in which the force acts across. This would be equivalent to stretching a rubber band until the elastic potential reached a point where two rubber bands existed instead of one stretched one. Now, we also observe the expansion of the universe. Not only is space being created throughout the universe, but it's being created at a faster rate. There is an idea called the "big rip" where space expansion accelerates to the point of ripping atoms apart. This idea I have asks the question: can space expansion accelerate to the point where enough energy is created between two quarks within a short enough time frame (across a Planck time, maybe) that a new universe is created? In analogy, could you "stretch the rubber band" so quickly that the existing universe didn't have time to dissipate the massive amounts of energy fast enough?
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The sex particles bum rushed each other
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You pinhead, I love chocolate how dare you think that I'm an ugly barnacle. I'm going to use my imaaaaaginaaaation to imagine you in your underpants and take out my secret string to firmly grasp it. You're going to fall over and scream Finland and then I'll proceed to call the Hash Slinging Slasher to come and LEEDLE LEEDLE LEE all over you. When that's done the Hall Monitor will put on his gorilla suit and get his friends chip, penny, and used napkin to whoop your Wumbo. When I'm done with you I'll return to the Salty Spitoon and make fun on Weeny Hut Juniors, you know the guys with the magic conch. I will spend my millionth dollar and first dime on a phone call to random people and scream NO, THIS IS PATRICK. Those people will be your family, and I will soil your Uncle Dirty Dan's good time. And I know that you love Crabby Patties so I will buy you mayonnaise from the musical instrument store. I will push your house somewhere else but I don't want to touch it because I'm sterile. Then I will ask your injured body if you are feeling it now and that you are number one, the doctor and I afterwards will go on a panty raid to smell that smelly smell that's smelly. And that's not when I shift into maximum overdrive to steal the formula. You best be scared.
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It's believed that the Big Bang sort of just came from another Dimension. Really bad definition, but think of a breaching whale.