because that how it was made its never ending
Not much, really. Our Universe MIGHT be significantly larger than what we can see -- that portion of our Universe we call the "observable Universe" -- or it might be infinite. No conclusion can be made about the size of our Universe based on the fact of the Big Bang.
The universe is so big and it will never be completely populated because it includes areas that are unlivable. The Earth is part of the whole universe.
The big bang might have created the universe.
The big bang was the BEGINNING of the universe so there was no temperature before it :P
as big as the secret to life, the universe, and everything, so very very big
Yes universe is endless and it is expanding but every thing that expands has its end once it reaches that end it explodes this might be the cause of the end of universe so there might be a end of universe
It *MIGHT*. However, all present observational evidence is that our Universe will not fall back into itself, meaning our Universe will not experience a Big Crunch. As observations and theory develop in the future, we MIGHT conclude differently. Or we might not. Predicting scientific discoveries is not (dare I say it?) an exact science.
Because it is growing at an exponential rate.
Scientists believe so.
No. Universe A expands from a 'Big Bang' stops expanding, and contracts until there is a 'Big Crunch'. Then there is a new big bang and the beginning of Universe B, a middle, and another big crunch, a big bang with Universe C and so on. At the time of any 'big crunch', all matter and energy from that universe ceases to exist. It cannot manifest itself until after the next 'big bang', and then has no relation to anything in its previous manifestation.
The universe isn't a place that has stayed big for years. The universe keeps on expending. Scientists don't when this expantion is going to stop but they do know that planets are constantly being created while expanding. Who knows, God might be doing this
The universe is so big that in every empty spot in the average night sky there are thousands of galaxies