Scientists do not really know much at all about the beginning of the universe. A popular idea is the Big Bang Theory, and another is creationism. How much do you know the interiors of the earth. Have you seen it for yourself of whats written in the books. The theories can be challenged as technology evolves.
The Big Bang theory does throw a light to the universe's creation and evolution but does fall short of some interesting problems. A new theory is emerging called hyperspace which again accounts for these problems and covers the other problems up as solved by Big Bang.
Another is the W-Map which is the energy print of the universe in the light of microwaves, Radio waves, and some other waves of the electrostatic spectrum.It shows us of how the universe's energy has widened from the time of its birth. It actually is accounted by the amount of dark energy in the universe.
"Cosmic" means "related to the Universe"; so this question doesn't really make much sense.
We may possibly know how Earth was created.
It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.It is believed that the Universe is much, much bigger than the observable Universe, but exactly how much bigger is not currently known.
studying moon rocks gathered by astronauts ;D
Based on chemical spectography, which is the maximum science we can use presently, we have "seen" approximately 1.25% of what "we think" are the range parameters of the universe. The farthest we've seen through spectography (much farther than visual or radiotelescopy) is about 600 billion light years away. Do the math - too many zero's for me.
We know that we have observed galaxies out to as much as 14 billion light years from us in every direction, and we have never seen an end to it yet.
Basically, we don't know what happened in our Universe, before the so-called age of the Universe was about one Plank time. Thus, that's as close to "the beginning" as we can currently theorize.At that time, what is now the OBSERVABLE Universe occupied much less space than a proton occupies nowadays; however, the entire Universe may have been much larger.
It is believed by most scientists that the "Big Bang" is the beginning of the universe. The universe is still expanding out from the center; the idea is that eventually entropy and gravitational pull will slow that expansion down to a stop, then start to reverse it. The galaxies will start to pull on each other, and the universe will start to move inwards again. When there is so much mass at the center of the universe from all of the galaxies, stars, planets, etc., a huge explosion (the big bang) will happen again, and an entire new universe will be formed.Ask an easy question like the meaning of life or something
It is believed by most scientists that the "Big Bang" is the beginning of the universe. The universe is still expanding out from the center; the idea is that eventually entropy and gravitational pull will slow that expansion down to a stop, then start to reverse it. The galaxies will start to pull on each other, and the universe will start to move inwards again. When there is so much mass at the center of the universe from all of the galaxies, stars, planets, etc., a huge explosion (the big bang) will happen again, and an entire new universe will be formed.Ask an easy question like the meaning of life or something
"Cosmic" means "related to the Universe"; so this question doesn't really make much sense.
by the density in which the bones accumalated equal out to
astronauts always go into the universe to search for life and also if we did not have any we would not know much about space
The universe is made mostly of dark matter and dark energy, and we don't know what either of them is.
Since we do not know the limits of our universe we cannot say for sure. As far as we can tell the universe goes off into infinite distances in every direction. We are at the centre of what we can see of the universe; but we have no way of knowing what part or how much of the total universe that is.
No. He discovered hydrogen and oxygen, but those elements have been around since pretty much the beginning of the universe.
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We may possibly know how Earth was created.