It may be that we live in an endless universe, both in space and in time. And there've been Bangs in the past, and there will be Bangs in the future.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
There may be many Big Bangs that happened at various and far-flung locations, each creating its own swelling, spatial expanse, each creating a universe - our universe being the result of only one of those Big Bangs.
There may have been many big bangs, one of which created our universe. The other bangs created other universes.
We can trace things back to the earlier stages of the Big Bang, but we still don't know what banged and why it banged. That's a challenge for 21st-century science.
I'm trying to understand cosmology, why the Big Bang had the properties it did. And it's interesting to think that connects directly to our kitchens and how we can make eggs, how we can remember one direction of time, why causes precede effects, why we are born young and grow older. It's all because of entropy increasing.
'Big Bang' is unbelievable; I'm blessed, but it's not the only thing in my life.
The Big Bang theory is the idea that if we go back early enough in the history of the universe - and we can do this, of course, by looking at starlight coming to us from billions of years ago - we will see a very hot and dense period where the universe was much smaller, denser, and hotter.
Physicists are working on the Big Bang, and one day they may or may not solve it.
My forehead is sometimes too high, but bangs could correct this.
Science predicts that many different kinds of universe will be spontaneously created out of nothing. It is a matter of chance which we are in.
This is the way the world ends, not with a bang, but a whimper.