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Author Topic:   Big Bang Origin?
bkelly
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Message 1 of 2 (249912)
10-07-2005 8:40 PM


While reading some of the threads here on cosmology, astronomy, and the big bang I occasioned on a thought about a possible cause of the big bang.
Assume a universe similar to the one where we exist. There are massive black holes in every galaxy. For some reason the galaxies combine and the black holes combine. Eventually we get down to one black hole. However, there is so much mass in the black hole, such extreme conditions that there comes a point where the environment is too extreme for matter to exist in any form. But the matter is there. The paradox is resolved by the all the matter transferring states to energy.
At that instant, all the mass of existence has become energy in one relatively small place. It has no mass. I can only think of its temperatures as approaching infinity. It, ahem, explodes into space, and some or much of it eventually transitions back into matter. All evidence of the past has been erased. We have arrived.
Has this been thought of and refuted?

AdminNosy
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Posts: 4754
From: Vancouver, BC, Canada
Joined: 11-11-2003


Message 2 of 2 (249915)
10-07-2005 8:52 PM


Thread copied to the Big Bang Origin? thread in the Big Bang and Cosmology forum, this copy of the thread has been closed.

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