Question:

Big bang theory is enough for explain the origin of universe if so how is the other side of universeyetnotget?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

the black space of other side of the over seeing universe. the science is not yet get that information , i want any theroy stating that existace proving

 Tags:

   Report

10 ANSWERS


  1. there is another which challenges big bang theory but not famous as it.

    It is steady state theory.

    There is the other one also which will be published by me in few years.

    JUST WAIT AND WATCH.....................


  2. If I were you, I would change my priorities.  First, I would learn how to compose a sentence, then I would start worrying about the nature of the universe.

  3. What the h**l?  Hopefully someone super smart who knows this stuff inside out will answer you...because only an expert in the field could figure out what you just said...

    work on your grammar and spelling before you try to figure out the origin of the friggin universe dude!!

  4. dude fix ur question but from what i understand from you, the only we dont know the rest of the universe is that light hasnt arrived yet from the far away areas of the universe.

  5. dude...what did you even just say? you speaka da english?

  6. First, I would suggest repeating 3rd grade and getting your spelling and grammar down. Then I would stop asking such questions because there are no answers.

  7. Wow, I have no idea what you're asking, or even what you're trying to say.  Can you try and provide more details?

  8. The other 'side' of the universe is outside our realm of science, we cant view that far yet, only theorize about what is there and whats happening, Stephen Hawking is a good source of theories on the topic.

    I think that space is what you'd imagine a nucleus would have around it, its the center of a cell with all kinds of functions, but if that nucleus was to think "Whats beyond the far reaches of my cell" it would be thinking the same thing your thinking "Whats beyond my cell (space)" for the cell their space would be us, which is only the tip of it, the nucleus isn't even aware of the world we're in, just us as the world, the same can go for us, what we're thinking is the vast reaches of space could just be the darkness of the 'cell' we're in..

    I wouldn't be surprised if at a point in space our space just become another small cell in a big body of space that includes many different totally unrelated spaces with different rules on whats there, anythings possible, huge galaxies of condensed water, clumps of fire, huge amounts of light, multiple suns, or at one point space might just get thin like climbing a mountain, the air just gets so thin that nothing can survive and beyond that is absolutely nothing continuing on forever.

    A good theorist would say "The other side of the universe is right behind you" since you'd be looking in one direction, and not the other.

    If you want to get your mind blown away with this kind of thinking, play black and white 2, the intro explains the 'superpower' theory pretty well while also including "What is way way out there"

    Or maybe its like in my dreams, where I finally reach the end of space, and its just a big red bricked wall.

    Hope that helps, your question wasn't very well written out.

  9. WTF the question is nuts, makes no sense.

    You don't have to need us to prove it for you... Research it yourself, then make up your mind.

    This or god.

    And he's a sick b@stard...

  10. I'll take a stab at your question.  I think you're asking about what is beyond and what was before the universe.  You seem to want to know what it is contained in.

    The universe is not contained within anything or a part of something bigger.  It is, by definition, everything that ever was or ever will be.  There is no "outside" and there was no "before."  We're not used to such things in the world we are familiar with.  Such weirdness would only apply to the universe itself.  This is why nobody can say what caused the Big Bang.  When you discuss the extremes of the universe, it eludes our ability to do rational inquiry.  It can't be perceived or compared to anything.  We can't even imagine it from outside without destroying its fundamental truths.

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 10 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.
Unanswered Questions