The planet Earth and its crust did not form until about nine billion years after the Big Bang. In a sense, the Big Bang caused everything, but the connection of the Big Bang to the Earth's crust is not very direct.
One of it is the Big Bang Theory.
The Big Bang is the cause of everything we know - the Universe around us. If the Big Bang itself was caused by something else, we don't know about it.
No, the Big Bang theory explains the origin of the universe and does not directly relate to the creation of volcanoes. Volcanoes are formed by the movement of tectonic plates on Earth's surface, which cause magma to rise and erupt through the Earth's crust.
miners have been able to dig into the earths crust by big machines and other huge tools and they have only dig ed 2 miles into the earths crust
This is not known at this time.
The big bang was the source of the matter in the universe, some of which eventually formed the earth.
No, not really. The Big Bang theory has to do with the universe as a whole, not piddly little things like stars.
Because God created it (or perhaps ordered it to be created). If you want a more scientific explanation: the Universe as we know it was the result of the Big Bang. What came before the Big Bang - or the exact cause of the Big Bang - are currently unknown.
According to the believes of physics and the big bang, we know that the big bang was both big and a bang. Since we are still receiving radiation from the big bang, So considering that factor I would say that it was big and a bang. What do you believe?
Big Bang - Big Bang album - was created on 2009-08-19.
The concept of the Big Bang is theoretical and without definitive origin. Consequently the concept of a Big Banger to initiate the Big Bang is less than theoretical.Theoretically, an unnamed instability is explained as the likely cause ofthe Big Bang. A small quantum fluctuation could have created all the matter and energy we see today and inflation accelerated that energy outward.
The Big Bang theory posits that the universe began as a singularity, a point of infinite density and temperature. The exact cause of the Big Bang is still a topic of scientific debate, as our current understanding of physics breaks down at the moment of the Big Bang. Some theories suggest that quantum fluctuations or the collision of other universes in a multiverse may have triggered the Big Bang, but conclusive evidence is still lacking. Ultimately, the origin of the Big Bang remains a mystery that scientists continue to explore.