Possibly, however there is no evidence for this (nor is there evidence against it).
The universe began rapidly expanding and cooling. This expansion was NOT an explosion because there is nothing around the universe for it to explode into.For what it is worth the Big Bang never ended, it is still happening.
No. They do move away one from another, due to the expansion of the Universe.
The rate of expansion of the universe is measured by the Hubble constant, which is around 70 kilometers per second per megaparsec.
Well, we don't actually know that the universe itself rotates at all. The only movement we've established thus far is the generalized expansion and the movement of individual structures within the universe.
The age of the universe according to the Hubble Space Telescope is estimated to be around 13.8 billion years. This estimate is based on observations of the cosmic microwave background radiation and the expansion rate of the universe.
The universe began to expand around 13.8 billion years ago during an event known as the Big Bang. This expansion continues to this day, and is a fundamental component of the evolution of the universe as we know it.
It took around an hour for it to collapse.
The universe isn't wrapped around stuff. The universe is displaced by the stuff.
Who does phoenix rotate around in the universe?
We can never see the Big Bang or what happened around that time, because photons were not free to travel through the universe yet. It is also important to realize that the word "universe" implies a totality of existence; it is everything that has, does, and ever will exist. So you can't say there is "another" universe - if it exists to us, then it is part of the universe.
No, there is not there is no edge to the universe, and there is nothing outside of the universe. there just IS the universe.
The Universe Around Us was created in 1929.