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WHAT WAS BEFORE OUR UNIVERSE?

THE BEGINING OF 'BIG BANG' THEORY

By Emmanuel Ekow QuainooPublished 3 months ago 5 min read
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WHAT WAS BEFORE OUR UNIVERSE

THE BIG BANG THEORY'S ORIGIN

How did our universe come into being? If you think that question is difficult to answer, consider what existed before our universe. As scientists search for the solution to the most challenging question in human history, let's see what they have discovered so far in the 20th century. This man has helped to solve the mystery surrounding the origin of our universe. Edwin Hubble discovered that the seemingly random clouds of gas flying around are, in fact, other galaxies, and that there are many of them. He also discovered something else that altered the course of history forever: that the galaxies are moving. You might wonder what this meant, and the answer is quite significant. The universe is expanding, so if it did start somewhere, it probably did so some time ago. All we need to do is travel back in time to find that starting point. It took the scientists many more years to develop a comprehensive theory. The so-called cosmic singularity, a state of our universe in which it was extremely small, dense, and extremely hot, is what gave rise to the Big Bang Theory. If our universe were compressed into a small ball, the pressure and temperature inside would be so great that, at some point, it would be impossible to withstand them. However, nothing has ever existed anywhere, neither when nor where it existed. and the Big Bang is about to happen. Okay, so we know how our universe was created, but what was before that? It was an outburst of energy and matter that created everything we see now, including time and space, basic physical forces, and quarks scattered everywhere. These corks, tiny particles that make up our world, were all boiling in an incredibly hot cosmic broth when it cooled down, and gravity began to attract them to each other. They gathered into atoms, then molecules, and finally into the first objects in the world, stars. American theoretical physicist and cosmologist Alan Harvey Guth has dedicated his entire life to deciphering this puzzle since discovering The Big Bang Theory Guth discovered some flaws in it, such as the extremely even distribution of matter (which shouldn't have been). To illustrate this, let's hang a paint-filled balloon from the ceiling and place a white canvas on the floor. If we drop the balloon, it will burst, revealing absolute chaos on the canvas with random spots that aren't all the same. However, this isn't really how the universe appeared. Alternatively, instead of tossing a colored ball from the ceiling, let's draw a small red dot on the canvas. Now, let's expand it a bit more and capture this entire event on frame-by-frame shooting. This will show us a circle that is gradually expanding in all directions. the actuality Martin Bojawald, a German professor of physics, believes that the universe was born quite differently from the theory that it was small, infinitely dense, and supersymmetric. This is because, according to his theory of inflation, the early universe was very even and proportional. According to this theory, there was a force that existed even before the Big Bang that might have greatly accelerated the process of quickly and equally distributing everything in space. Most scientists now rely on this theory. Martin's theory states that it is heated. This is absurd, but where did the singularity originate from? To understand this, consider a pendulum on an antique clock. It revolves back and forth, moving smoothly, continuously, and without interruption. In contrast to how humans typically perceive time, which never stops flowing, quantum (time) Ho-Ho Not at all like that; rather, quantum time functions more like the second hand of a clock, consisting of tiny intervals and brief stops. As with the second hand of a clock, the start of one time segment corresponds to the conclusion of another. For the sake of illustration, let's return to balloons. based on the Big Bang Theory According to Bojawal's theory, the beginning of each universe is the end of the previous one. Our universe is not at all the first and not the last; millions of similar universes existed before us and will exist after us. This theory, although it sounds very logical, is far from complete; unfortunately, we don't have enough knowledge to find all the evidence for it, so for now, all this is just a hypothesis. Once upon a time. Our universe began to expand and inflate like a balloon, but sooner or later it would blow away. Back, the universe will start shrinking and return to the state of cosmic singularity. and then guess what? the big bang too! Nothing appears out of nowhere and disappears into nothing; however, some people generate even more bizarre concepts. Scientists create theories that are so strange that no one could ever think they were foreign. Theoretically, South African physicist Turek and his American colleague Paul Steinhardt proposed that our universe is merely one of an endless number of parallel worlds and that we are all caught in a never-ending cycle of reincarnation. This theory looks for answers far beyond our universe and claims that, yes, there have been and will be an infinite number of them. It also suggests that there will be endless big banks. Both of these theories sound amazing and terrifying at the same time. as in membrane, which means that, like strips of cloth on a rope, we're trapped in an elastic surface that can contract, extend, oscillate, and so forth. These parallel universes are close to one another, and we're not the exception. Even though there could be a universe just a few inches away from ours, we are unable to see it because of a minuscule gap that houses the fourth dimension. Brain collisions, which happen when two brains progressively approach one another and eventually collide, produce these worlds along with two parallel universes and a great bang. . After that, the created worlds continue to exist. When we hear that our world is just a piece of fabric on a rope, it sounds like complete nonsense, but this idea is based on string theory and theory, two giants of quantum mechanics. If they turn out to be true, they could explain almost everything in our universe. We are currently at this stage, but when they disappear, the brains collide again, and this will lead to the birth of a new universe. Remember the inflation theory? There was a mysterious energy that pushed and accelerated the Big Bang. If we did collide with another universe, that would explain everything. Of course, everything described here is a great simplification. Steinhardt and Turok made a significant We can't make discoveries without struggle and fear, which is why Turok and Steinhardt don't plan to give up so easily after all the evidence that we currently have only says that each of these theories must be disproved. Nevertheless, Turok and Steinhardt say that scientists are regular people just like everyone else; they're afraid of change and the unknown and it's really scary to question everything we once believed in. That's all for today. If this quells your curiosity, please like and share the video with your friends. If not, click on these videos and keep an optimistic attitude. None of the three theories is definitive, so which is correct, at least not at this point in human development? Unfortunately, all we can do is speculate as long as we lack evidence, but perhaps one day we'll discover something that will finally clear our doubts.

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Emmanuel Ekow Quainoo

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