Yes... science believes the entire mass of the whole universe was contained in one condensed 'ball'. The 'big bang' splintered the ball into trillions of particles - which spread throughout empty space.
The Big Bang did not directly create Earth or any other planets. The Big Bang theory describes the initial expansion of the universe and the formation of fundamental elements. Planets formed later through processes like gravitational attraction and accretion of matter in solar systems. Each planet's formation is a result of its unique conditions and history.
The big bang theory has nothing to do with the formation of planets.
Everything happened after the big bang.
big bang
Scientists "speculate" that the Big Bang created antimatter, but it was destroyed when coming into contact with stars, planets, and other matter.
yes about 2,000,000,000 the thing that made thes planets was the "Big Bang". that's why we are alive today.
Our lord,God did.Don't let someone tell you the big bang did.
It all started with the Big Bang. All the matter created from the Big Bang eventually formed planets and every thing else. From the moment matter was created during the Big Bang the matter was expanding and moving really fast. So eventually all the planets and stars and galaxies that were formed started to spin around each other from the velocity that was created.
The sun has such a huge mass that it attracts all of the other objects closest to it.
By winning games on planets!
There are two questions commonly asked:1. Is it real, or did God create the universe ex nihilo?2. Did the Big Bang create more than one universe?3. How can the big bang account for dark matter and dark energy?
Without the Big Bang there would be NOTHING. The entire Universe - including space, and apparently even time! - is the result of the Big Bang.