We can never observe anything that occurred at the Big Bang or any time around then, because photons were not free to travel through the universe yet.
If we accept that quantum mechanics was applicable to the creation of the universe, then the Heisenberg uncertainty principle dictates that all of the matter in the universe may have come from nothing.
Events in the Universe are often dated from the Big Bang. But the fact is, NOBODY KNOWS what (if anything) happened before the Big Bang. The Big Bang MAY have been the start of time itself; but it is possible that the Universe existed (in some form) forever in the past.
The concept of "before" the Big Bang is not well-defined as time as we know it began with the Big Bang itself. It is thought that the entire universe was in a hot, dense state at the moment of the Big Bang, with all matter and energy concentrated in a singularity.
No, scientific inquiry cannot study events that occurred before the Big Bang. The Big Bang is the origin of the universe and the laws of physics as we know them. Anything before that is currently beyond the realm of scientific investigation due to the limitations of our current understanding and technological capabilities.
String theory proposes that tiny strings are the fundamental building blocks of the universe. It is a theoretical framework that attempts to unify all fundamental forces of physics. However, it does not address events prior to the Big Bang as the conditions before the Big Bang are still a subject of speculation and debate in cosmology.
The concept of space-time energy as we understand it today began with the Big Bang, as the universe itself began to expand and evolve. Before the Big Bang, our current laws of physics cannot accurately describe what existed or how it behaved. The origin of space-time and energy remains a subject of speculation and ongoing scientific exploration.
We have no idea what, if anything, existed before the Big Bang, or even if the concept of "before" has any meaning in this context.
The big bang is a theory.
There's no way to know, and at the present time, there is no theory, hypothesis, suggestion, or conjecture that describes anything before the big bang. In fact, according to current thinking in Physics and Cosmology, the big bang was the origin of "time", so the very concept of "before" the big bang has no meaning.
There was no such thing as 'space' before the Big Bang. In fact, there was no such thing as 'before' before the Big Bang. Space and time both began with that event.
Events in the Universe are often dated from the Big Bang. But the fact is, NOBODY KNOWS what (if anything) happened before the Big Bang. The Big Bang MAY have been the start of time itself; but it is possible that the Universe existed (in some form) forever in the past.
No. The big bang was before the dinos.
It was formed by the big bang but nobody knows how it was formed or what there was before the big bang
Before the Big Bang, there was no world, nothing. Nothing defies description.
The concept of "before" the Big Bang is not well-defined as time as we know it began with the Big Bang itself. It is thought that the entire universe was in a hot, dense state at the moment of the Big Bang, with all matter and energy concentrated in a singularity.
Before the Big Bang theory, many scientists believed that the universe was static, or infinitely unchanging.
Our concept of the "big bang" has no explanation about how or why, but our hypothesis is that there was NOTHING before the Big Bang created the universe.
Energy and space and time all came into existence when the universe was created. It happened when the Big Bang happened 13.7 billion years ago. We have no scientific understanding of anything before the Big Bang.