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Complicated Physics question. To large to type, views please?

by Guest56160  |  earlier

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Okay my, question is kinda complicated and might not even make sense, but here goes;

There are specific beliefs on what happened before the big bang and even what happens after this universe ends. Aside from the multiverse theory, singularity, and string theory, is the following scenario possible.

It is known at absolute zero, no matter can move. At temperatures approaching absolute zero, matter does weird things, and one noted is the Bose-Einstein condensate.

One theory before the big bang, suggests all matter/energy was a condensed ball like structure then exploded. Well what if, before/after universes come into/exit existence they are near or approaching absolute zero thus condensing them. After condensing is no longer possible and absolute zero is met, the matter explodes outwardly from the final condensing moment and all prior moments reaching a halt, as in a car shattering as it hits an immovable wall but to a infinite higher degree.

Does that make sense and is it possible? Is there a previous theory for this?

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5 ANSWERS


  1. Or................

    Another way out is: There was no "before." Time - Space Matter-Energy all began at the Big Bang.  See "A Short History of Time" by Hawking.  This is no more mind boggling than to try to figure out infinite time "before."  Or, if you are religious where God came from.

    Or, if you are NOT religious, where matter and energy came from.  This way everything just "started."


  2. To me I believe big bang made plants...but not anything with blood or intelligents but not on the creation of humans part.That is why many scientists argue generation opon generation over something not true.

  3. Actually, when you compress matter it heats up.  And the early universe was very hot - 10^32 Kelvin (18 billion billion trillion degrees F) at 10^-43 seconds.  Protons, Neutrons, electrons, photons and even quarks couldn't exist at these energy levels.  It took 300,000 years for 'ordinary' matter to form.

    Nobody remotely knows what preceded the big bang.  It's doubtful anyone will ever know...

  4. The question is based on a fundamentally flawed perception of time.

    There *was* no "before" the Big Bang.  It didn't exist.  The universe is a self-contained phenomenon of finite size and duration.

  5. Go study quantum mechanics and astrophysics for 8 or 10 years, then ask the question again.

    .

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