Although all matter in the universe was initially formed during the earliest stages of the Big Bang (in the form of hydrogen, which later fused into heavier elements in the center of stars), it is not accurate to say that the Earth was created by the Big Bang. Earth, like all celestial bodies, was created via the accretion of matter under the force of gravity.
We don't know. All we know (or, really, ever can know) is that the state of the universe currently is largely consistent with it having happened. There are a few things to quibble about (the Inflationary Epoch, for example), but by and large, all the evidence points to it having happened.
The evidence against it mainly amounts to "my religious book says something else", which is rather less rigorous a proof.
In the scientific community the bigbang theory is the current way to describe the origin and early developement of the the universe. It happened approximately 13.77 billion years ago. This is currently considered to be the age of the universe.
In short: everywhere.
The theory says that the universe did not start from one specific spot, but that the universe expanded from an infinitely small point. There was no vantage point that you could go back and "watch" the big bang happen from, that would imply the universe expanded into another universe. Which isn't the theory.
An analogy would be to think of a balloon. Not a real balloon but one that started infinitely small and expanded. Where on the surface did it expand from? Everywhere. If you were a 2D character living on the balloon's surface, you could not point to any spot on your surface as the origin of the balloon.
Continuing the balloon analogy - a 3D character could rightly say that the origin is in the center of the balloon, which isn't part of the 2D surface. As well, we could imagine a 4D answer to the big bang origin as some place not part of our 3D universe.
No.
Our Earth began to form about eight billion years after the end of the Big Bang
(more precisely, the end of Inflation).
Moreover, the Theory did not exist at that time, so could not have had any influence
on the Earth's formation.
Well the Earth was NOT created directly from the Big Bang. Earth was created from the debris (the rocks and dust) of the Big Bang condensing into Earth (the bigger rock). To go further, after the Earth was created, it was hit by a giant astroid, which destroyed it. This whole cycle went on again. The byproduct of this major event was actually the moon!
The big bang theory is an explanation of how the universe came to be. While the process of the big bang itself doesn't have anything to do with the formation of the planet, the big bang theory does offer a model that allows for enough time to accommodate contemporary theories of earth's formation and the development of life.
Good question. It was, we believe, about 13.5 or 14 BILLION years ago, and we currently have no witnesses - just a low-temperature microwave "echo" that seems to come from every direction pretty much evenly. But this sort of "echo" matches what we would expect if there had been a universe-creating explosion that long ago.
actually, no! The Big Bang is just the event that created the universe. It couldn't have made a sound, because sound didn't exist back then. Answer No, in space, sound cannot be heard. If you popped a bomb into space, you wouldn't hear the explosion. That is because their are too few atoms to jiggle, transmitting the sound to your ear. And at the beginning of the Universe, there were no atoms to jiggle and no space to jiggle in. So the answer is NO, doubly so. Also, the Big Bang was not really an explosion, simply an explosive expansion of spacetime. So the answer is NO, no bang was made by the Big Bang, triply so.
The Big Bang Theory doesn't even try to explain "how" our Universe began, it only DOES explain (as no other theory can) what happened after the beginning. Theory and experimental evidence match quite well going back to about 10^-32 of a second after the expansion of our Universe began. Before that point, hypotheses start to get ambiguous and speculative.
Right now our scientists can no more explain how our Universe began than they can explain why lightning occurs in the sky.
The big bang theory deals with the formation and evolution of the Universe, it has nothing to do with the origin of life on Earth.
The Big Bang theory deals with large-scale aspects, and with the early development of the Universe. The creation of life on Earth, and perhaps on other planets, is not part of the Big Bang theory.
Hello i am minakshi answer is that the big bang theory is an example of old scientific theory as big bang theory explains that there was an explosion but the isotropy and the homogenity of the universe is not explained by big bang theory to explain his we connect inflatation theory with big bang theory to explain it so the big bang theory is also an example of old scientific theory.
The duration of The Big Bang Theory is -1320.0 seconds.
The Big Bang is the theory that was developed to describe the origins of the universe.
The big bang theory is a model of cosmology it does not have any relation with earth's creation .
Without the big bang there wouldn't be an Earth to have a history.
The big bang theory deals with the formation and evolution of the Universe, it has nothing to do with the origin of life on Earth.
No, that was just part of the story for the TV show, The Big Bang Theory.
No. The Big Bang theory is an explanation on the formation of the universe. Earth did not form until billions of years later.
Big Bang Cosmology deals with the start (not necessary a creation) of our Universe as a whole, not with our Earth.
The Big Bang Theory tells what happen at the begning of the universe. How the Earth comes into the universe
the "big bang" theory, is a theory as to how the universe was created from the explosion of a single, very large, very dense, body of matter. so in "theory" the people or earth only exist because of the big bang
The Big Bang theory deals with large-scale aspects, and with the early development of the Universe. The creation of life on Earth, and perhaps on other planets, is not part of the Big Bang theory.
Implying that you believe in The Big Bang Theory then yes our "World" aka Earth was created from the products of The Big Bang.
The most recent theory that upholds the Big Bang theory, but suggests a sudden expansion after the bang, is called the inflation theory. Earth is 4.54 billion years old.
Hello i am minakshi answer is that the big bang theory is an example of old scientific theory as big bang theory explains that there was an explosion but the isotropy and the homogenity of the universe is not explained by big bang theory to explain his we connect inflatation theory with big bang theory to explain it so the big bang theory is also an example of old scientific theory.