I've never understood why people have this idea that the universe is like a bubble with an increasing volume. |
Because they would be
wrong. Just because planets and stars are spherical, does not mean the Universe must be spherical. The Universe is actually flat: http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/uni_shape.html
It too must be made of some particle, I think.
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Dark Energy.
A while ago I saw a NOVA episode about how, in such-in-such trillion years, the matter in the universe may tear apart because of space expanding. |
Keyword: may.
The Big Rip (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Rip) is just a hypothesis, just like The Big Crunch (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Crunch). The most accepted model at the moment is The Big Freeze, where the Universe continues to expand for infinite time but due to the Second Law of Thermodynamics the temperature of the Universe would be Absolute Zero resulting in heat death.
This means that to speak of a "before the universe" is meaningless, since before the universe there was nothing, not even time itself. Therefore, isn't is meaningless to speak of the creation of the universe, or its having come into being? Even though the age of the universe is estimated at 13.7 billion years, isn't it possible to say that it's infinitely old, since it has existed for as long as time has? Doesn't that mean that the universe has always existed, and therefore that it was never created? Doesn't that make the question of where the universe came from moot, since the universe didn't come from anything or anywhere - it has simply always been?
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We don't if there was "nothing" before the Universe. Anything that happened before the Big Bang could not have affected anything that happened after. All we know is that the "battle" between equal amounts of matter and anti-matter in the Big Bang Singularity (a point of zero volume, but extremely high mass: hence infinite density) caused them to annihilate together and caused The Big Bang and the Universe
as we know it. We don't even have an accurate model of the early Universe before one unit of Planck Time, and we may never know. To understand the pre-Planck Time era we would need a "Theory of Quantum Gravity" because everything was so small that General Relativity just simply doesn't apply and Quantum Mechanical effects are most important. To this date, no such theory exists, so we cannot properly determine if the Universe actually had a beginning or not. The biggest obstacle of this, I would summise, is that Quantum Theory relies heavily on probability.
Did you know that, using an old analog television, you can see some remnants of the Big Bang by tuning the it between 2 channels? About 1% of the snow and noise comes from the Big Bang itself. It's possible to "eaves drop" on the beginning of the Universe itself.
"We need a Theory of Everything, which is still just beyond our grasp, perhaps the ultimate triumph of science." -- Stephen Hawking
"The poetry of the expanding Universe and the complexity of life; we are not normally equipped to understand it. Science gives it. Science is opening your eyes to the wonderfulness of what's there, to the poetry of the expanding Universe." -- Richard Dawkins
"Science is more than a body of knowledge. It's a way of thinking. A way of skeptically interrogating the Universe. If we are not able to ask skeptical questions, to be skeptical of those in authority, then we are up for grabs." -- Carl Sagan