Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:there's also a PBS TV series made from that
The TV series can in fact be watched online (QT or Realvideo) here:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elegant/program.html
Harald
Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:there's also a PBS TV series made from that
Bob Hegwood wrote:But once again, how do we know that there's no trace of it left?
But how do you know that space, time, and the natural laws weremaxim wrote:That's simple. One often forgets to mention that not only SPACE and TIME is initially created by the big bang, but also the NATURAL LAWS themself. As everything we can experience , measure, detect or compute bases on the constraints the natural laws give to us, there is definitely no trace of anything before the big bang (whatever that means - as time also was created then, there is no 'before') as such a trace won't be part of the existing natural laws and therefore not part of our universe.
maxim wrote:What you can do is, to ask: 'Why are the natural laws as they are? Could there be other natural laws?' and then, from that point, try to deduce what could there have been 'before' - but that's pure philosophy.
Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:Bob Hegwood wrote:Was a serious question, and I didn't mean to put anyone off of this topic. I mean, we're looking at such a HUGE event, that we have absolutely no idea what existed before the Big Bang, right?
...
But keep one thing in mind - there technically IS no "before the big bang", because time itself (along with space) was created by the event. Time simply didn't exist before the Big Bang occurred. Neither did space - which means that space is being created as the universe expands. It's not expanding INTO anything.
t00fri wrote:Precisely that traditional view is widely challenged, as I pointed out in my Cosmology 'summary' post in this thread. Most leading cosmologists (Hawking, Linde,...) & many String theorists are meanwhile advocating a different picture for good reasons.
Bob Hegwood wrote:Nice to know that there are still some scientists in the world who don't take everything we think we know about the universe as the gospel.
Aren't FRESH ideas one of the reasons that cosmology has come as far as it has?
Seems to me that - until we know all of the facts
conclusively - then even the wildest speculations may (or may not) be given some credence.
I understand that, but even Einstein was considered a radical non-standardEvil Dr Ganymede wrote:If there's any 'scientist' who thinks that, they don't have any right to call themselves scientists. There is no way that we know everything there is to know about the universe at this stage.
Isn't that what I just said?Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:The advancement of all scientific knowledge is dependent on fresh ideas being proposed and tested.
Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:So long as they have basis in fact and observation and evidence, that's probably true. But the wildest speculations are the ones that DON'T have that support, and until they do they shouldn't be given credence.
Bob Hegwood wrote:I understand that, but even Einstein was considered a radical non-standard scientist when his proposals were first announced. Was he not?
Evil Dr Ganymede wrote:Isn't that what I just said?
Did not mean to imply that they should be given credence... All I meant was that any new idea should not be thrown away simply because it doesn't conform to the generally-accepted postulates of the time.
If they were, we would not know about the expanding universe and such things as dark matter and dark energy.
Bob Hegwood wrote:But we know what's happening when we get to the North Pole, and we know why we start going South if we continue on our journey... This probably was NOT the case at some point in the past, because we hadn't learned enough about our environment. That's really all I'm saying here. I don't understand how someone can say that nothing exists outside of our universe if we haven't learned enough about it to make an informed decision.
andersa wrote:Now some factless speculation: What if the Big Bang is actually the point where a five-dimensional hypersphere first touches a four-dimensional space (the fourth dimension being time) when crossing it, the fourth-dimensional intersection of the two bodies involved becoming the space-time of our universe (rather than appearing in it)? If so, the universe should eventually contract much the same way it is currently expanding, and there will be neither "before" nor "after" the universe, only "inside" and "outside" it (the "inside" part being the one we can observe). If we could build a time machine and travel back to the Big Bang, we may well find ourselves suddenly going forward in time as we pass that point, later ending up in a completely different part of the universe, just as an airplane crossing the North Pole may go from 70?°W to 110?°E in a few seconds. Does my imagination make any sense?