Big Bang Theory?

Hepheastus420

Well-Known Member
^^^ I was thinking he was on to something but I forgot all about velocity, ha went brain dead for a second.


Man I just grasped some logic and now you put something else in my head.
 

Mr Neutron

Well-Known Member
One amazing thing about galaxies colliding is that anything from one of the galaxies actually hitting something in the other galaxy is almost mathematically impossible. They would simply pass through each other causing slight gravitational shifts.

Think about that for a minute.........
Yeah, I've heard that one before, too... still I think we've been expected to take a lot for granted. My point was, the belief in theories is a religion unto itself. If you don't subscribe to the established theories, then you are ignored.
Check this out:
http://www.spaceandmotion.com/
 

BendBrewer

Well-Known Member
Interesting. A little bit too much info to digest at once though. But as the link states a theory that can be tested. Never seen that done by a religion. I would say the difference is one involves theory and the other faith.

Religion seems to focus on the unanswerable WHY. Science focuses on the HOW and science continues to figure out more and more everyday.
 

Farfenugen

Well-Known Member
I had a big bang last night with the woman, I guess you can say our galaxies collided, no red shift, I saw the black hole and asked if I can land on Uranus, but as soon as I we imploded everything collapsed

all in all a great trip around the universe
 

heinrichs

Member
We are on the verge of answering some of these questions with the Hadron Supercollider in Europe,where they already report the possible discovery of "bose higgs particles"which in theory are thought to exist but have yet to be proven.The collider is also being used to see if "dark energy"and "dark matter'exist,which are thought to make up 75%of the universe.
 

mindphuk

Well-Known Member
Not to be mean, but the universe expansion is NOT and was Never caused by Gravity.
Don't be so sure. All forces that we know of are associated with a particle and all particles have a representative anti-particle. Ant-gravity is a repulsive force and could be responsible for a rapidly inflating universe.
 

Hepheastus420

Well-Known Member
Interesting. A little bit too much info to digest at once though. But as the link states a theory that can be tested. Never seen that done by a religion. I would say the difference is one involves theory and the other faith.

Religion seems to focus on the unanswerable WHY. Science focuses on the HOW and science continues to figure out more and more everyday.
I think religion is more like faith in a god, gods, after life, because there is always a possibility and there always will be one. While science is more of finding what is fact out of the possibilities.
 

Padawanbater2

Well-Known Member
Hey does the big bang theory insist that time is finite or infinite?
That could go either way at this point. Time is just a concept made up by humans, as the universe expands, so does time. I think there are two main theories leading the way right now, one says the expansion (as it's still accelerating) will continue and eventually things in space will become too distant to see even with technology. The other one says the gravity will overtake the acceleration and everything will contract back in on itself, leading to, what they believe, will be another big bang type expansion, starting the whole process over again from the beginning.
 

Hepheastus420

Well-Known Member
It's weird if you think about it it's impossible for time to be finite or infinite, now I have something to think about when I hit my bong later.
 

RawBudzski

Well-Known Member
Humans use time as a way to determine past present and future.. time is a fun thing to think about, cause if you leave the planet.. what time is it? if your no longer on Earth.
 

Luger187

Well-Known Member
when the big bang first started, there wasnt matter. it was just energy expanding. eventually, things spread out enough and the universe cooled down to allow photons to form, and light was born(i think about 330,000 years after initial expansion). then it cooled some more, and other particles formed, eventually leading to atoms.
i think at first it was all hydrogen atoms. they clumped together, creating enough gravitational force so that fusion started. the hydrogens came together to form helium, the second heaviest element. this helium is heavier, and floats to the middle of the star. then the same thing happens for lithium, and all the other elements up to iron. iron cannot be a fuel source for fusion, thus the star runs out of energy to 'burn'. eventually gravity takes over, and the star collapses. then it explodes in a massive supernova. these explosions are the biggest explosions we have discovered in the universe so far(i believe). it is so powerful, heavier elements like gold and silver are produced from the force. that is why these elements are so rare.
this process is what spreads different elements out into the cosmos.

i guess that didnt really have much to do with the big bang haha
 
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