Brian Cox - What Caused The Big Bang?
Вставка
- Опубліковано 8 лют 2025
- Brian Cox - What Caused The Big Bang?
Ever pondered the enigma of the universe's inception? Join Brian Cox and Brian Greene in a captivating exploration of the Big Bang's mysteries. This journey takes us 14 billion years back, to a time when all matter and energy were compressed into an infinitesimal point, destined to expand and create the cosmos we know today.
This video delves into the depths of cosmology, challenging the boundaries of our understanding of physics. Discover the nuances of time's creation, the nature of the universe at T equals 0, and the emergence of time and space as we comprehend them. We examine the universe's expansion and cooling, leading to the formation of the first particles and atoms, culminating in the cosmic microwave background radiation - a testament to this colossal event.
But the intrigue deepens. What existed at T equals 0? Was there a 'before' the Big Bang? Our experts analyze theories like quantum fluctuations, where the vacuum of space teems with energy, potentially sparking the Big Bang. The multiverse theory, string theory's branes collision, and cosmic inflation are also scrutinized, offering diverse perspectives on our universe's birth.
This video isn't just about seeking answers but understanding the questions themselves. We shift from asking 'why' to probing 'how' - how conditions aligned for the universe's birth, how physical laws and randomness intertwined to birth our cosmos.
Dive into a universe so dense that it's beyond imagination, where concepts like 'repulsive gravity' challenge our very understanding of cosmic forces. This journey through the Big Bang's aftermath isn't just a scientific exploration; it's an invitation to marvel at the cosmos's vast complexities and mysteries
Subscribe to Science Time: / sciencetime24
#briancox #briangreene #bigbang
I have waited 13.75 billion years to see this video.
YOU, my friend, are the big bang!
Just think..... if space, matter and time was able to be created within trillions of a second, whats to say it cant all collapse or change within a trillionth of a second. Life really is that short
Nobody told you time is an illusion?
@@silveriver9 ask me again in 10 minutes
@@silveriver9An illusion? The past, present, and future exist simultaneously, according to Einstein. And, time slows with motion and gravity.
Finding new videos with Brian Cox's name on them is joy...
This isn't new, I've heard him say that bit about inflation in about 20 other videos
Brian Cox was a mediocre player for the 01patriots.
Brian Cox's name was clickbait.
Nah, I hate those ridiculous scammy AI bot videos that’s like THEYRE ALREADY HERE or thumbnails with Brian Cox looking sad like WE ARE SCARED or some clickbait shit, and it’s just stock or stolen footage with some AI voice and clips taken from other places
He talks about unknown things like it’s 100% true …. A good bs artist
Our brains are not sculpted to understand what this universe is.
Tell that to humans 200 years ago
Even today it’s just out of our scope. The more answers, more questions arise.
But we are of the universe created within it because of it. So our brains are more than sculpted by it, in fact they are a culmination of it.
We are designed to think start and end but maybe this whole thing is for eternity. No beginning no end we are just a pebble on the beach.
I came to the same conclusion trippin on LSD back in the 9os😅🎉❤
I’m a simple woman.. I see Brian Cox, I click.
Holly Finkle clicks on Cox
you love him.
what the hell is wrong with you both she just made a simple comment
@@jesterps2236 thank you, I was thinking the same thing myself.
@@jesterps2236 to the rescue!
As Brian pointed out, if time started with our universe, then it makes no sense to ask what happened before that occurrence, and if it doesn’t make sense to ask what happened before that occurrence, it also doesn’t make any sense to ask how it occurred. That’s because the “how” question always implies a temporal element and apparently there was no time before the big bang.
God
@EvicFiniteGen13 doesn't exist, but it's nice you have an imaginary friend
IMO, nothing happened before the so-called, "Big Bang." The fabric of space and time came into existence from a black hole, and we're living within it.
There has been many expansions
That’s hilarious so we are not allowed to go beyond our understanding. Ok Einstein don’t ask any questions because we now have to stop thinking. Time is just a veneer. It can be manipulated so it’s like a cover. You can peer around it’s sides, through it and beneath it. What ever created it, or what came before, exist outside of time, and therefore is not governed by it. Now is not the time to stop thinking
Absolutly the best,content to listen to when I need to fall asleep.
One of the amazing things to me is that we’re not some sort of separate thing from the universe. We’re not an outside thing observing the universe around us. We are part of it all. So, especially the universe ponders itself. We ponder the universe and we are a little section of it. The universe is something that thinks about itself.
I know that I’m not the first to think of it that way, but I never really hear anybody talk about it. Except by the woo people. But the woo people are correct, about that little part. The rest is, uh, woo.
Some people's head's, have been challenged if they have in fact, entered a race with cosmic inflation. Ego, is not bound by limits of general relativity, or the universe, in initial expansion.
Yes have thought that too. 👍
The beauty about Science is, it's not afraid to say - we don't know (yet).
I am no physicist by any stretch of the imagination, but I love watching this stuff. For all the physicists out there, I have a question. Prior to the Big Bang, were there any "laws of physics"? Were the processes driving the creation of matter controlled by a "physics" that was extant prior to the Big Bang? Are the laws of physics a product of the "matter" formed during the Big Bang (or simultaneously)? If there were no laws of physics prior to the Big Bang, what would this mean? Could the Big Bang have happened spontaneously from nothing as there were no "laws" that made this impossible? My brain goes into melt down just thinking about this stuff!
I am a physicist and so far as we can work out, the laws of physics as we know them came into being at the moment of the singularity. There were clearly physics involved but the rules as such are unknown.
As a physicist, can you please explain what possible physics explain cosmic inflation where all matter, energy and the expansion of space was faster than the speed of light. As I recall, in the early 80's the Cosmic Inflation Theory was proposed to fix problems with the Big Bang theory that cosmologists saw in the observable universe. It seems Einstein's Theory of Reality where nothing can travel faster than the speed of light was definitely not part of the physics immediately after the Big Bang. Cosmic inflation lasted for a trillionth of a second.
Thanks.
@@MrPeterprincipleNothing with mass can travel THROUGH space faster than the speed of light. That's true. .
BUT the 'big bang' was SPACE itself expanding and carrying the matter outwards with it. . .
Imagine a ball of dough with raisins in it. . Raisns on the surface and within the dough cannot travel from place to place faster than the limit (let's call that limit 'the speed of light')
BUT if the ball of dough expands as it's being cooked, all those raisins are moving away from one another in the dough. . . Each individual raisin is not moving *_through_* the dough, but is being carried along BY the dough as it expands (faster than the speed of light).
Another analogy I've seen used is dots on the surface of a partly inflated balloon.
Inflate the balloon quickly. . . All the dots rapidly move away from one another. NONE of the dots are moving across the surface of the balloon. . They remain fixed on the rubber exactly where they were, and yet without moving 'through space' (across the surface of the balloon) they are all moving away from one another at an impossible speed. the dots are moving outwards WITH space and not THROUGH space.
Does that help explain?
I think a key point often overlooked is this video is only talking about 5% of the total matter and energy in the universe. Hardly worth a video, perhaps, once the smart folks figure out how dark energy / matter interact in all this which are by far the "drivers" of our universe. We just can't see it...
No physicist can answer this. There are speculations but we barely understand the laws of physics as they are. Gravity being a perfect example. So we have virtually no way of actually knowing what physics were like at the Big Bang.
There was no start and no ending. This been going on for eternity it keeps repeating! We just evolved this time around.
Is this just your opinion or whats your source? 🙄
I just love assuming things based on what I think is right and ignoring the facts laid out in front of me
An you know this because you saw a dream while still being in you mother womb?
How can there be no start, though? Is that not a logical contradiction?
You could perhaps start to resolve this by suggesting that time isn't what we think it is, but then you can't use words like 'eternity' within that same argument, otherwise it's contradictory.
Very impressed with this video. I have always been interested in astronomy and physics. It was things like this that drove me to enter those professions. Thank you for feeding my insatiable curiosity about the universe and the wonders that we discove
Nah, it's misleading and clickbait. Brian Cox is hardly in this video and he doesn't answer the question posed in the title. None can.
The bit with Cox is at least a couple years old as he still talks about 350B galaxies, where the revised-up number is now 2-4 trillion.
@@maflones It's not misleading, at least not necessarily, because the title consists of a question; it does not consist of a statement / assertion.
Granted, if they wanted to avoid any possibility of misleading anyone at all, they could've worded the title something like 'The ongoing mystery of 'what came before' the Big Bang.'
@ Go away troll.
Had a meal of baked beans & fosters beer some time ago ; that was my big bang ...
Thought provoking video & thanks for that .
What created the infinitesimal point that held all the matter in the universe? 🤯
Maybe blackholes over many billions of years
Most likely a big crunch...
And, where is that point?
@@chrissmith6675 The center of the universe.
That infinitesimal point you speak of was just a big huge star that collapse (big bang) creating a black hole .
We are in one .
In other words our “big bang “ was a white hole .
And space , like in a black hole expand faster then the speed of light (light can’t escape a black hole) .
The event horizon is exactly the same of a black hole and our beginning of our universe , we can’t go beyond (CMB) .
Etc etc .
The numbers of similarities is high
My Model For The First Events in the Beginning of the Universe.
(From left to right)
1. Singularity before the Big Bang was eternal photons.
2. Big Bang was a release of photon energy.
3. Photons through pair conversion, created space time; and both the fundamental particles and first atoms of hydrogen and helium.
4. The universe temperature continued to drop until the annihilation phase when all free electrons (e-) and positrons (e+) not in atoms, began to annihilate and turn into pure energy.
5. This massive universe wide conversion of mass to energy caused the inflation phase.
This model suggests my answers to these physics questions.
Q. What was the singularity that started the Big Bang?
A. Eternal photons outside of space and time.
Q. Where did the anti matter go?
A. It went into the protons and neutrons. Protons have 2 positrons and one electron. Neutrons have 1 proton and one electron.
Q. Why did inflation happen?
A. When the temperature fell low enough, free electrons and positrons annihilated in a universal wide explosion of energy that created the inflation period.
There was nothing forever, and when theres nothing forever, something happens spontaneously in a blip, before it goes back to nothing forever.
Basically, forever infinite...anything can happen and will.
Well when you pull two quarks apart it creates two more. If accelerated expansion keeps going in our universe there may be a point where it expands fast enough to pull quarks apart. Then the expansion energy starts to pour into matter creation. Then gravity adds up and slows expansion down. Bang a bunch of matter and an extreme expansion rate.
I have thought that very thought. That will be how a universe will restart from a big rip.
Or perhaps God just farted and our universe is made up of the remaining fart matter. The repulsive gravity was literally repulsive.
@@winkipinky wonder if we could expect a log to be following soon then...
Thanks! I did not know about the creation of two more quarks after a pair is pulled apart.
@@winkipinky Damn. I know who's a shoe-in for the Nobel Prize this year!
This was very well written, and executed. Thank you.
Sure ignore the blatant clickbait
most fantasy talk seems to be that way
Interesting that the James Webb telescope is now challenging all of this and is exposing how much guess work is going into it !!
They aren't happy about it, but history repeats its self. Alot of advancements missed because of peoples egos.
no... it isn't. What it is doing is challenging our assumptions of the young universe.
lol no it’s not. How tf does this comment have 20 thumbs up.
It gets thumbs up from confirmation-bias numpties who don't really know what they're looking at and think of physicists as guessing and unknowing. The JWST observations have not challenged 'all of this' at all. All it suggests is that early galaxies might have formed more rapidly than we thought. Some people then naturally think we have it all wrong, there was no big bang, Einstein and Newton are wrong etc etc ad nauseam. Drivel. More likely that the early universe was super-dense and hot (we know that) with intense dark matter action allowing first-gen galaxies to accrete stars extremely rapidly.
“Imagine an infinite point containing all the matter and energy “ …… but how was all that matter and energy there? Where did it come from is my question not how it “expanded “ but how did this infinitely small point containing all matter and energy come to be , it couldn’t just have been how did this small point come into existence
As a black hole from "another" universe? (another region outside our singularity) Speculating, obviously.
@@rainierisendam4491and where did that universe come from
Singularity means nothingness,ie absolute emptiness
The beginning of our universe was probably caused by the end of the previous universe. Everything in the previous universe was pulled into a singularity and it inevitably "popped" and "reset" the universe. This could have started happening trillions of years ago.
@ericcantdance any proof?
Something to consider is that running the clock backwards shows everything in the universe moving in the direction of convergence in a singularity, but it could be that all matter was confined to an unimaginable mass with finite and measurable dimensions, like an impossibly massive and bright and hot star but nevertheless with measurable properties. Think of it like if your house is on Main Street at the center of town (the singularity). Well, just because you show up at the grocery store at the edge of town (the modern era) one morning doesn't mean you left your house, maybe you had a sleepover at your friend's house who lives closer to the edge of town than you do. Just because you can point from the grocery store to the center of town doesn't mean all cars that arrive at the grocery store started at the center of town. Now, I'm not saying this is what happened, I'm just saying it's a possibility that is overlooked, and we can be asking the question what caused this mass of matter with some measurable size to exist. Maybe it's a rant of an older universe which collapsed. Maybe quantum field converged at the point and caused each other to generate particles in unfathomable quantities. Overall the big bang is a fascinating field to study.
Cryan Box is a cool dude and always a good listen.
Never mind the big bang, how did the singularity - every thing , get there in the first place? Are there any more of these hanging about?
Imagine that, the title was pure clickbait.
Penrose has an hypothesis for this in that, the big bang is the result of the collapse of a previous universe
@@dwinexboy77I like this idea!
@dwinexboy77 but how did that universe come to be?
you will go in infinit regress , so the answer is god
With new discoverys, is it possible that there wasn't a big bang but a collision of two dimensions (one over full and one empty. Leaving one rapidly bleeding into the other? Giving the look of as if it was an explosion?
You guess is as good as anyone's because the scientists don't know either.
I love space 💜
I love all the discussion and hypothesis! I learn something reading all these everytime.
Awareness is known by awareness alone; is the sole irreducible axiom of reality. To put forth a syllable to the contrary is but to concede.
wut
My theory is that there was a universe before ours.
Like our universe it had black holes, which keep growing and growing, eating everything in its path. Until a time one black hole gets so big that it swallowed everything else in the universe.
With that black hole having nothing else to feed it it eventually exploded in a "big bang" and a new universe began.
hmm do you think that onces we die we could come back at some point with a diffrent life then the one we have today ?
I like the way you think. I've always thought something similar.
I think our universe formed much like a drop of water from a leaky faucet. Maybe a universe outside of ours, like you described, allowed for "larger" states of matter to exist. A massive amount of matter was possibly compressed by one of these black holes until a critical point was reached, which caused a white hole to burst into our universe, causing the inflation of our universe. Beyond that, I imagine dark matter might be what our universe is expanding into, and instead of rebounding our universe might just continue to disperse. My imagination is vast, lol. I think black holes are punctures in the fabric of our universe due to matter being too "heavy" for our universe to contain.
@@tanzilmuslehudd9403 I don't know about that, I suppose maybe but if so our memory of a previous life gets erased at death.
Two of three responses want to be included in the next universe... you wanna tell them, or should/could I?
Its just so insane our brains can not comprehend the absolute beginning of literal anything and everything. Its weird to try to think about on the "why?" And "but what about what caused that to cause that to cause that?" The smaller and further back you go
I bet the big bang was nearly as loud as dropping the toilet seat in the middle of the night
Two thoughts......
First ...If time and space were created at the moment of the big bang, then events preceding it are unavailable for observation and are therefore irrelevant.
Two...If, at the moment of the big bang, the universe was a singularity with infinite density, the gravitational forces would have been so immense that it would have been impossible for it to explode.
What if it didn’t have everything in it but it was kinda like how 5 is in the middle but can be used to go down or up through the infinite numbers inside. So 5 could exist but it doesn’t have to be everything in one place at once.
Don't worry. Be happy.😊
I don't buy much about cosmology theories about the Big Bang. For example, the idea that the singularity was an infinitesimally small point presumes the existence of space in order for "infinitesimally small" to make sense, but what if space didn't even exist yet? Or time.
Why even use the word "explosion"? Clearly it was not one.
Who in the video used the word explosion...?
@@manoo422 it was used.
@@TedToal_TedToal Not to describe the Big Bang, idiot.
@@TedToal_TedToalThe narrator said "suddenly expanding in an explosive burst of creation". This is poorly worded (and misguided language) as it gives the wrong impression that there was an explosion. But cosmologists do not define the Big Bang as an explosion at all, only a rapid expansion of space and time.
This video is not the best presentation for layman because it uses a lot of confusing language and even contradicts itself a few times. It conflates "theories" with "hypotheses" (which are two different things), it defines cosmic inflation as before the Big Bang, and then later says it came after the Big Bang. And it asserts that the "singularity" model is the primary model used by Big Bang cosmologists today, which is false.
It does get a lot of things right, but the presentation is very poor, misleading, at times contradictory, and ultimately confusing. You are correct to be skeptical of the singularity theory because it has largely been debunked by the cosmological community. But your reasons for being skeptical of it makes no sense. If we assume that the universe did in fact originate as a singularity, then an "infinitesimally small point" would have no space because it is "infinitely" small. It would only represent a point of energy absent of all dimension (including space and time). So there would be no "space" in a singularity. Think of it as a negative dimension, existing nowhere in space, like the center of a black hole.
The real problem with the singularity theory is that it doesn't allow for as many predictions as cosmic inflation prior to the Big Bang, which means it's superseded as the inferior theory. Under the cosmic inflation model, you never get to a singularity.
We have all grown up hearing that. But we now know it was always a bad choice of words. I beleive it arises because there was a sudden incredibly huge energy burst, acoompanied by an equally huge expanisonof spacetime.
From the time of big bang, the universe and life has gone through a large series of random "accidents" that are producing marvelous designs ... amazing! I wish I can see at least one of such accidents in my life.
"Accidents"? Or God?
Almost like those accidents are by design, oh wait they are. Thanks God for putting this is motion so we can have a chance to live
Do Christians seriously come on here just to judge us?
NO. Einstein believed that the Universe is infinite (and therefore also infinitely old). That must mean he didn't believe in BigBang either. I certainly don't either.
Neither a finite universe or an infinite one make any sense to the human brain or mind. Ultimately it matters not what any of us believe, it will be revealed through mathematics to be one or the other, regardless of our feelings or beliefs.
Well, that’s that sorted!
I don’t think saying the universe is infinite means it didn’t start somewhere buddy
@@khosta6690If it's infinite, then it couldn't have a beginning. You can't traverse infinity, meaning, you couldn't go from the beginning to where the universe is now, because that's infinite...you could literally never get from the beginning to now.
It’s crazy how one human being cannot perceive all the information in the entire world, but that information spread out across every human being is the only way it can exist
In another universe you wrote this comment
no…the same nebula from two different times
Excellent lecture.
Before and after big bang is heaven with the smarter people
One interesting theory from the past, galaxies are a collection of island universes, each with a central gravitational force in an expanding object motion. Andromeda now has an estimated 1 trillion stars. The often asked puzzle Mass from nothing from a Big bang makes no sense.
At one time, the entire universe occupied less space than a single atom.
The universe was created by an invisible man in the sky.
I don't know which story is more unbelievable.
the latter because it allows for multiple different laws of reality based on a higher or lower dimensional playing field
Theology and cosmology are mutually exclusive; cosmology explains the how, the mechanics only. But it should be obvious that the universe was created by God - who is not a "man in the sky" but beyond our comprehension. God's mind is beyond our capacity to understand.
The Bible was never intended to be a scientific textbook. It tells us most importantly WHO created the universe and WHY it was created. It also tells us HOW it was created in a very non scientific way for us humans to understand. In my personal research, the sequence of creation events as represented in the Bible is not contrary to what science teaches.
The answer manifests itself in everything that happens.
The universe forces everything to evolve in a spiral shape until the most outward parts are so spread they are forced back to the center that eventually will have stronger force/gravity.
When the center is so tight it has no option but to evolve again, the process happens again, and again.
Who else has a fear of falling up to towards the sky? Gravity reversal... Scary 😳
Not me.
I fear the the sudden loss of hydrogen oxygen bonding energy.
Seek help, that's not normal 😅
How was the temperature of the singularity infinitely high? Singularity means when all matter is packed so densely that no particle is even able to move even so slightly. And temperature is the quantity which refers to how fast particles are moving in a thermodynamic system. So singularity should be at absolute zero temperature (-273.15 K).
Please discuss 🙏🏻
With very high pressures, very minute vibration can translate to very high temperature. If back pressure is removed particle vibration would be big. Absolute zero is not like that. Eg: apply a high pressure with hand and rub it. Contrast that with low pressure rub. High pressure rub needs only a small rub to generate heat. Although work done will be same if time taken is constant to achieve a particular level of temperature.
The difference between scientists and creationists is we ask 'Why?', 'How?' and 'Where's the proof?' And we admit we are wrong when proven so. We don't start with answers and twist evidence to fit them, inserting magic in the gaps.
Where were the proof???science fiction...now we know the universe probably has no beginning...dark matter and dark energy ( ghost 👻) created by science to fix they theory ( some of them has no evidence)they are so arrogant and still taking about the 13.5 billion years (LIES)they don't know yet if our universe has a beginning 😊
Here is a thought about the big bang and big crunch theory. If the universe is expanding at the speed of light due to dark matter or dark energy, and everything will eventually cool down to the point of non-existence, then how will gravity call back the non-existent matter to form a big crunch? Seems to me that the big bang/big crunch theory won't work and we are living in a "one of" universe with no repeats.
To me, BigBang is like a Hearbeat, it was not the first nor the last, we had bigbangs before and we will have bigbangs in future
I have often thought that… and there could be many in many dimensions
You'll be thinking of "big bounce" cosmology.
Then there is the idea that our universe isn't the only one, there's a "sea" of universes all bubbling away.
Then there is the idea that we don't bounce, we just expand to oblivion, but the sea of expanded universes is prone to clumping into new big bangs.
You have not any proof. İt is just your imagination.
I did!
Wow, that's a load off my mind.
I feel so much better now!
God did it. It’s impossible for nothing to exist. God is eternal and has always existed as spirit outside of time, space, and matter.
Lol...
Who created God then?
What is God made up off...
@@anshumanjaiswal5787 I don’t know maybe God created by his mother😂
Prople who refuse to belive something can just exist by itself and then go on to explain it by something that can exist by itself.
You know the bible is not the only book right?
How could a god take any action or have any thoughts without a passage of time in which to have these experiences? A timeless being, when you really get down to the crux of it, is still a seemingly exaggerated and illogical concept in its own right.
For instance, if you were to hypothetically have a conversation with such a 'timeless' being, and ask them what their earliest memory is - what answer could they possibly give you that isn't automatically invalid by virtue of having 'always existed'? (And bearing in mind that their very thoughts would also count as memories).
It's a logical contradiction, as I said.
How does the 'eventuation' of space fit into current understanding / discussion?
One Big Bang doesn’t make any sense.
Multiples do? Both seem absurd to me. This all had to have a beginning.....whether it's one or an infinite number.
@@redriver6541 what’s wrong with “we don’t know” ?
Where did the energy come from to produce the expansion?
religious people say god energized it.. but why so much complication & infrastructure if it is all for a few humans on a small planet.
But what about the new information regarding the potentially new galaxy discoveries made by the james-Webb telescope?
Stating there are fully developed galaxies where there shouldn’t be? Or if he believe this may be something else?
I’d love to know Brian cox’s take on this?
13.75 billion years seems a very short time period when theres all eternity to go at. 2 branes collided? What made the branes?
What caused the big bang. GOD DID!!!
The easy way out! Just believe in a god and everything will be ok? You are going to be disappointed.
@Darrenholmes no my friend. You will... it's easier to say to yourself there is no god than to face the fact that you are a sinner and need a savior and that savior is God. You have been lied to if you think a massive bang came about for no reason at all from nothing... Cause and effect = science... for there to be a big bang, there must be a being or a force outside of the place where the big bang takes place for the big bang to take place... bombs don't explode on their own, somebody had to trigger the bomb for it to go off... THINK ABOUT IT.
Only when mankind understands exactly what time is we won't get anywhere with science
Big bang = God
Amen 🙏 it not that complicated, no other explanation will ever ever make sense.😊
If you believe that you do not believe the bible you believe in a creator
@@johnrb9397and if you believe in a man like creator is that not stupid when the bible was written they knew nothing of what’s in space do you believe women were made from adams rib and that man can walk on water the earth is 4.5 billion years old not what the bible states we would all like to believe in heaven but it’s simply not true is it no evidence what so ever
@@TracyMorton-i1e Tracy firstly God is spirit not a man no one has seen God. God is outside of time and space. Although all bones can repair themselves, ribs can regenerate themselves.
“In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of God was hovering over the waters.”
Genesis 1:1-2 NIV
@@TracyMorton-i1e it was understood to be the case that a cell was a basic homogeneous substance a hundred years or so ago. Now we realize the complexity found in the coding of DNA. Even Richard Dawkins has recently said that the spontaneous emergence of life is improbable ☺️. All the best.
Listening to this, makes me support Sir Penrose's CCC even more
CCC still makes me feel profoundly uneasy. All hypotheses regarding the beginning of the universe, or lack of a true beginning, do as well. We're just not equipped to deal with infinity.
infinity is a bitch@@dougthompson1598
@@dougthompson1598 Seems that way, doesn't it. Infinite regression has fukt with my mind more than once.
“Everything we see now was compressed smaller than an atom” this is where they lost me, if we can believe that, we can believe anything that doesn’t make any sense
Just because its beyond you, isnt relevant.
@@manoo422 you didn’t get my point, if you can believe everything can be compressed to less than an atom without any evidence, is not science, it is in the religion territory
I just listened to a theory that gravity is caused by the warping of time. If the big bang was caused by negative gravity would this be the warping of negative time?
I.e. the end of one univers's deflation causes the inflation of the next universe with the warping of negative time?
I love silly cartoons. 😌 Heck, science doesn’t even know what time is.
Science has made a tremendous amount of progress in our comprehension of various aspects of reality, even if it's far from completing its journey of understanding everything; if that's even a journey that necessarily has an end per se.
The Bible would have to be the biggest cartoon of all time, or at least comic of sorts - making all sorts of claims based no verifiable or testable evidence, and yet is bold enough to profess knowledge of what created no less than everything. To me, there is virtually nothing more absurd than that. (But I understand why so many people like the comforting idea of a sky daddy that supposedly loves them).
My understanding is if I travelled to an area of super-high gravity (like a black hole), and came back to earth, thousands of years would have passed - effectively moving me forward in time. So, if an area of repulsive gravity existed, would that move me backward in time? Are time and gravity linked?
I love your content. Could you share where you find those amazing scenes?
Prof Brian Cox is the most clever and most beautiful man.,.
Well for now we know that our exact makeup, the way we see the world, the way we feel emotion, and the way in which we think; may never happen again. From any point onward everything is on a timer, slowly but gradually fading out just as the universal masses would cool down and become dark. What happens after is any one's guess. But most likely if some how this happens again, may we reach a similar point like this to enjoy and experience like we once did.
I had baked beans last night!
Where is this infinitely dense point if no space yet, and where did the energy come from? Scientist will avoid these questions by telling it's wrong to ask.
I've noticed that as well
What was that initial atom sized ball of energy sitting in? What did it expand into?
Thank you! Love this video! We all have to come to our own conclusions. I've been trying for years to figure out what mine is. I just can't figure out my own conclusion (and probably never will) what started everything, everywhere. In my mind, there has to be a beginning. Even if I believe the multi-verse theory, and our universe is a new bubble from other multi-verse bubbles, how did they start?
It's mind boggling to even think about. I also am starting to think this has something to do with interaction and crossover between dimensions but that's pretty edgy stuff, even for me. Then there's the simulation theory which really makes me crazy so I can't even go there; thanks to whoever put that in my head, ugh! It all just makes me wish I went into this field, it is so very fascinating! I'm a huge fan of Brian......oh well, back to work.
Another concept is that energy density as measured by the impedance of space is what governs what appears to be gravity. This new idea, The Z0 Code, allows for an open universe with no need for a singularity or big bang. This proposes that the development of the universe is ongoing. It explains what the the JWST sees and incorporates the observations of LIGO.
The Big Bang 💥 is the moment of Creation ✨
I' m just wondering if there was a singularity...where that singularity was placed exactly? Does anybody have an idea about this? Thanks
It was everywhere.
Yes, everywhere. Greene or Cox would have mentioned it somewhere in this vid. There is no one point in the universe you can point to and say that is where the BB emanated from, since it was the creation and source of everything we now see, so, yes, everywhere and we were inside it. Detune your TV and some of the static you'll see is the Big Bang afterglow, the CMBR.
The unit Brian Cox mentioned-one million million million million million million millionth of a second-doesn’t have an accepted name.
It’s where our current understanding of time breaks down, together with everything in existence.
I think the answer is right in the title.😮
I agree with the concept ask How not Why makes a lot more sense than the religious creation myth
In what way this repulsive gravity could be related with dark energy? I'm assuming they are unrelated as I've never heard this gravity concept being mentioned on dark energy discussions.
I wondered that too, dark matter/energy and repulsive gravity must be linked closely, right?
Well, the big bang, and 9 months later, a star is born.
We are biologically incapable of comprehending the concept of "before the big bang", assuming it's not a meaningless concept entirely.
What if we're simulated beings deliberately designed to never understand such a concept?
Tom's Theorem:
When a black hole ingests everything in it's path, including light, that light and matter isn't "eliminated" from the universe, nor is it a portal to another universe. Black holes create dark matter through this combined "devouring" of light and matter, and spew it out of their centers, fueling the expansion of the universe. A black hole is never "dormant", it doesn't "burp out" energy when it's full, and it's working way harder to produce and emit dark matter than it does to shoot gamma rays. When it does emit gamma rays, it's actually a drop in activity from "dark matter production", at the same time giving us something we can see and analyze in the form of light beams.
I can understand their explanation of the big bang. I've always wondered where the single atom he mentioned came from? What was before and where did it come from?
It didn't come from anywhere. It was always there wise guy.....
@@michael-4k4000 "It was always there" is a religious statement (philosophical at best), and has nothing to do with science or understanding the universe.
Look into the Higgs field and boson particles. Also check out "Is nothing something?"
I'm not going to pretend I have a mastery of this knowledge, so I'll let you research this on your own.
What I can't wrap my head around now is that before the Higgs Field could exist, a *place* had to exist first that would allow the physics of a Higgs Field to exist. (Presumably) A lot had to happen before the singularity. (Also, Presumably) This is where you could venture into an "eternal chaotic inflation". But that would still require a place for this to exist. This is where I am personally. Maybe a real physicist can chime in and tell me how f'd up I am. Lol! Haha
@@DIYRepairHour True scientist
@@michael-4k4000You have no idea if that's true or not.
Is it possible that Inflation was able to happen with the speed that it did because at that point space was actually being created and without the prior existence of space there would have been no constraints of time?
See I think inflation theory is all wrong because without time, space or an observer, size meant nothing. Think about it, a circle is still a circle no matter what size it is, and it gets bigger, or smaller the bigger or smaller you, the observer are. Scale is meaningless without perception of time and space.
The universe pulsates. The pulses is driven by gravitation.
So... this little ball that's smaller than an atom that exploded into what would become the Universe... in what space was that little ball sitting before it exploded? It's just mind boggling. The fact that ANYTHING even exists is beyond my comprehension.
Two universes scrapping together gave rise to a fresh explosion
Hello - Each Big Bang occurs of its own accord without prompting or ignition of any sort. Best wishes.
The hows and whys of the Universe and it's existence is probably a mystery that we'll probably never know despite of all of the cute little equations that try and fail to do so. But one thing is clear even though they won't admit it. Repulsive gravity = explosion. Inflation = explosion. Unimaginable forces, temperatures and expansion from an unimaginably small and dense object = explosion.
13.8 billion years. Checking my watch to see if it could record that, probably not. I wonder how they figured that, probably too complicated for anyone, even them to understand.
What confuses me about "13.8 billion years ago it all started" is that we know time is flexible. A gamma ray created during the big bang could, today, be 1 second old from its reference frame. And we have no reference frame for the Universe itself. We don't know if the observable universe is moving at relativistic speeds compared to a much larger cosmic structure. The observable universe could be like that gamma ray, and 1 second to us is 14 billion years to some other reference frame. How can observable red shift really give us that answer?
The answer is a very simple one - we do not know, and we will never know, we can only speculate.
7:09 so if it might have been something smaller than an atom.... where was that thing that might have been smaller than an atom? Where did it reside or come to be?
The more one thinks about all this, the more it drives you nuts.
I am sure you are mistaken.How can we be expanding and yet colliding with Andromeda?
The "big bang" theory is designed to explain the "creation" of this universe and everything in it. We literally DON'T KNOW if there even was a "big bang". We don't actually know how big the universe is, nor do we know if it's finite or infinite. We also don't know how old it actually is. It's wonderful to know that our "experts" can get it wrong. As history has shown, theories CAN be incorrect. If a theory is presented as being accurate, rigorous testing needed to have occurred to confirm its validity.
We DO know there was a Big Bang, we DO know how big the universe is and we DO know how old it is. we also know the universe is very definitely finite in size. The theory has been rigorously tested and is very robust. It may not be 100% perfectly defined at the moment but nothing else come close to explaining the universe we see today...
I agree Klaus. Two different theories on how old the universe is right now. We don't know its boundaries as things are moving apart and we can only see so far. I've read many arguments on why the big bang didn't happen. But humans don't fully understand physics yet and the experts do sometimes get it wrong. We still have a lot to learn. Peace.
@@mikestephens5200 No, just you.
@@manoo422 Nothing of what I've said is set in concrete, you however, seem to be buried in it.
@@IamKlaus007 What you mean is you dont understand any of it so it must be wrong...genius....
Didn't the JWST findings recently suggest the Universe might be twice as old as previously thought?
No.
Nah, just found something nobody ordered.
no one knows how it all started.. no one will ever know how it all started
I would not be surprised if it one days turns out that our current big bang theory is completely wrong and we have to start the process of understanding the 'beginning' all over again.
James Webb telescope findings had contradicted that no such thing as Bing bang and subsequent inflation had never occurred. But Here you’re explaining Bing bang 🤔
Realy I like this video its interestyng
All of the matter that makes up our bodies. It was there at the big bang. We were there at the big bang
Chuck Norris.
Every time Chuck Norris makes love, a universe is created.
As a given, let us say that nothingness and everything-ness are opposite sides of the same coin. The singularity represents a state of "nothingness" (heads) because it lacks time and space, even though it contains infinite mass and energy. Everything-ness in Time and Space: The opposite state (tails) would then be an "everything-ness" where time and space exist, allowing for the universe as we experience it. This implies a transition from a timeless, spaceless state of infinite potential (the singularity) to a dynamic universe filled with matter, energy, and the dimensions of time and space. So, rather than the Big Bang, maybe we should call it the Big Flip.