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4 votes
2 answers
354 views

Was the Big Bang an event within a preexisting Universe, or did it mark the beginning of the entire Universe, beyond just the observable Universe?

Could it be that the Universe is truly infinite, and the Big Bang was merely a singular, specific event that resulted in the birth of a 'bubble,' i.e. what we perceive as 'the observable universe'? ...
impact's user avatar
  • 51
2 votes
0 answers
69 views

Cosmic background radiation - what frequency tells us?

I understand that cosmic microwave background radiation is remnant of the universe after 380,000y of the origin. To me, this radiation is still a wave which has a microwave frequency and I also ...
Giorgi Lagidze's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
78 views

Could inhomogeneities or topological defects break the fundamental symmetries of the Universe?

I have heard that some types of inhomogeneities and topological defects in cosmology have been proposed to be able to break fundamental symmetries of nature such as the Poincaré, Lorentz, ...
vengaq's user avatar
  • 1,017
5 votes
1 answer
292 views

What is the elemental composition of the universe?

What is the current distribution of elements in the observable universe? Wikipedia lists the composition of the Milky Way, but I'm not sure how the values would change if intergalactic medium were ...
WaveInPlace's user avatar
3 votes
0 answers
61 views

Can we determine our orientation in the universe relative to the origin point of the big bang? [duplicate]

Based on our knowledge of the expansion of the universe, can we trace galaxy movement backwards in order to determine the approximate relative location of the point where the big bang occurred? The ...
Michael Hall's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
355 views

Because the Universe is expanding, what is it taking up?

It is my understanding that the universe is expanding and that matter takes up space. While the universe only contains small percent of matter, wouldn't expansion indicate that the universe is ...
depperm's user avatar
  • 129
1 vote
1 answer
40 views

Can two neighboring galaxies move apart at steady speed?

While I was trying to understand the three models that obey Friedmann's two assumptions of a non-static universe, I came across a line that says and I quote "It (referring to Big Bang) starts at ...
Aryan Arya's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
111 views

Shouldn't the estimate of the universe's age be higher, not lower, after the attractive strength of gravity is taken into account?

From 'Fundamentals: Ten Keys to Reality', by Frank Wilczek : "Running the movie of cosmic history backward in our minds, we found the galaxies all coming together to meet at a definite time. ...
Kurt Hikes's user avatar
  • 5,177
0 votes
1 answer
74 views

Centre of the Universe [duplicate]

Why shouldn't the original singularity of the big bang happen to be the centre of the Universe? Assume that the universe is expanding isotropically with a constant speed.
Jack the Ranger's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
64 views

Was universe spawn from nothing? [duplicate]

Was universe spawn from nothing? Until now, scientists figured out that the Big Bang happened from a tiny particle which was infinitely energy densed and having infinite mass. If that is the case ...
Sazzad Hissain Khan's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
867 views

How can something infinitely big have expanded from an infinitely small?

Please help me reconcile what I see as contradicting theories: The universe began with the Big Bang and expanded from an infinitesimally small point. The universe is infinite. How can something ...
dniq's user avatar
  • 11
8 votes
1 answer
256 views

How do we know so many details about Big Bang, but we do not know if Universe is finite/infinite?

I understand that this question may be too vague, but I am confused about the following: On one hand we know a lot of "details" about Big Bang, like really precise details, evolution of universe, age ...
NoSenseEtAl's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
208 views

Have we measured or found evidence of a detectable origin point of the big bang? [duplicate]

Based on reading the wiki page of the big bang, a simple question with a probably not a simple answer came to mind. The statement on the wikipedia page was. Since Georges Lemaître first noted in ...
Tom Sol's user avatar
  • 437
4 votes
1 answer
123 views

How can you verify the theories presented on TV shows like "How the Universe Works" is current and/or valid? [closed]

There are many TV shows such as "How the Universe Works" that explain theories about the origin of the universe such as the Big-Bang Theory. What resources can I access to verify the scientific ...
Joe Bigler's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
201 views

Is it possible that the Universe is expanding due to additional Big Bang events?

Is it theoretically possible that the Universe is expanding due to additional Big Bang events that have occurred at the same location that the original Big Bang occurred at? Perhaps there has been an ...
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