Clover228 said:
Hi everyone.. I'm supposed to find the pros and cons of major and minor theories on how the universe began.
The only things i have so far are the big bang and creationisme..but i can't think of anything else! Help ! =(
Clover if it is a homework assignment or term paper, or other school-related work, then we have a special section
https://www.physicsforums.com/forumdisplay.php?f=152
We are not supposed to give very much help with school coursework here at this Cosmology forum.
In my signature at the end of the post, in small print, are some links.
The astro.princeton.edu
and the einstein-online links may be relevant.
Bounce cosmology is attracting a lot of research interest these days. Here are some papers that are mostly on it:
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/spires/find/hep/www?rawcmd=FIND+DK+QUANTUM+COSMOLOGY+AND+DATE+%3E+2005&FORMAT=www&SEQUENCE=citecount%28d%29
You can see papers here written 2006 or later which have been cited over 100 times. This is usually a sign of much research interest.
In this version of the big bang the conditions are created by the collapse of a previous spacetime region. In the quantized gravity of Loop Cosmology quantum effects make gravity repel at very high densities, so the collapse can lead to a rebound ("big bounce") and then to an expansion.
Most of the first 20 or 30 papers that the Spires search turns up will be about the bounce cosmic model.
Roger Penrose has an alternative to the bounce model. Google "Penrose Cambridge" to get his 2005 talk about his idea.
Like many of the other models being studied, it goes back in time before the big bang.
The idea that "time begins" at the big bang seems to have gone out of fashion with the people who are actually doing the research, so there are a number of pre-big bang concepts about conditions that could have led up to the big bang. It is seen as the beginning of the current expansion but not necessarily as the beginning of time.
As it says at Einstein-Online, in the essay called "A Tale of Two Big Bangs" most cosmologists would be surprised if it actually turned out that there had been a singularity. They talk about the putative singularity as a way to mark a moment in time, but it is just a convenient time-marker---the place where the classical 1915 General Relativity theory breaks down. (This does not mean that Nature breaks down!

)BTW a new book on pre-big-bang ideas will be coming out in October. Too late to help with your school work. I do not recommend the book, but it is probably good to know of its existence. Here is the table of contents:
http://www.springer.com/astronomy/general+relativity/book/978-3-540-71422-4?detailsPage=toc
Here is a general description:
http://www.springer.com/astronomy/general+relativity/book/978-3-540-71422-4
==quote==
...
...
Written by the leading protagonists
...
The Big Bang model is now both theoretically and empirically well established. However, the very beginning of our universe still remains mysterious. General Relativity breaks down at very small spatio-temporal scales and at high energy densities. That is why Quantum Cosmology is needed. Recent developments open up the exciting new prospect of going "beyond" the Big Bang and even finding a physical explanation for it. Surprisingly, the ancient idea of a past-eternal universe is being revived, and fascinating new approaches are also being developed.
This book provides an up-to-date overview of the competing scenarios in cosmology and discusses their foundations, implications, and philosophical aspects. It gathers original contributions from the world's leading researchers in Quantum Cosmology, who describe their own work and results in a manner understandable even to non-specialists.
==endquote==