Big Bang With No Center Fallacy?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Islam Hassan
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Big bang Center
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the nature of the Big Bang, questioning whether it originated from a specific point or occurred uniformly throughout space. It emphasizes that the Big Bang did not happen in an empty space, as space and time themselves were created during this event. The term "Big Bang" is critiqued for being misleading, as it suggests an explosion from a central point, which contradicts current cosmological models that support homogeneity. Participants express dissatisfaction with common analogies, like the balloon analogy, for explaining the concept, noting their limitations. Overall, the conversation highlights the complexities and misconceptions surrounding the Big Bang theory.
Islam Hassan
Messages
237
Reaction score
5
Either the Big Bang began in a small, restricted area/volume/domain/node/etc or the universe sprang into existence "everywhere all at once" -whatever that means- as I once read somewhere (to explain why the universe has no center). So which is it? And if it sprang into existence in a homogenous way everywhere at once, why call it a Big Bang? Seems like a throw of the 'Big Switch' rather than a Big Bang in that case...
 
Astronomy news on Phys.org
Space was created at the big bang. It didn't expand into anything but the universe did go through a massive expansion.
 
Islam Hassan said:
Either the Big Bang began in a small, restricted area/volume/domain/node/etc or the universe sprang into existence "everywhere all at once" -whatever that means- as I once read somewhere (to explain why the universe has no center). So which is it? And if it sprang into existence in a homogenous way everywhere at once, why call it a Big Bang? Seems like a throw of the 'Big Switch' rather than a Big Bang in that case...

To say the Big Bang begain in a small area is a little bit off the mark. There was no "empty" space that the Big Bang happened in. It is thought, taking into consideration homogeneity that the Big Bang occurred geometrically in all points of space/time and then inflation and expansion followed. Prior to the Big Bang it is thought there was no space/time, so to assume the BB happened at a "point" in space/time fails to take into account that space/time as we understand it did not yet exist.

To clarify for you - the Big Bang did not begin in a small restricted part of space - current cosmoligcal models and pretty universal isotropy (excluding local variance) can rule this out.

Yes, the Big Bang is counter intuitive terminology and interestingly was coined by Fred Hoyle (a steady state advocate and in disagreement with expansion theory) as a derisory term; to Hoyles dismay the term stuck.
 
Cosmo Novice said:
To say the Big Bang begain in a small area is a little bit off the mark. There was no "empty" space that the Big Bang happened in. It is thought, taking into consideration homogeneity that the Big Bang occurred geometrically in all points of space/time and then inflation and expansion followed. Prior to the Big Bang it is thought there was no space/time, so to assume the BB happened at a "point" in space/time fails to take into account that space/time as we understand it did not yet exist.

To clarify for you - the Big Bang did not begin in a small restricted part of space - current cosmoligcal models and pretty universal isotropy (excluding local variance) can rule this out.

Yes, the Big Bang is counter intuitive terminology and interestingly was coined by Fred Hoyle (a steady state advocate and in disagreement with expansion theory) as a derisory term; to Hoyles dismay the term stuck.

Thanks for insight. I guess the spatial projection of the BB is another of those phenomena for which no satisfactory lay explanation really exists. The circles-on-a-balloon analogy especially I always found quite inadequate. Another case of mathematics over eyeballs...
 
Islam Hassan said:
Thanks for insight. I guess the spatial projection of the BB is another of those phenomena for which no satisfactory lay explanation really exists. The circles-on-a-balloon analogy especially I always found quite inadequate. Another case of mathematics over eyeballs...

As Cosmo Novice said, the BB is both counter intuitive (at a deep level). It is a VERY unfortunate choice of designations that has caused untold hours of folks trying to overcome the misunderstandings that arise from the idea of an explosion from a central point.

The circles on a balloon analogy is really a very good one if you understand the limitations that it does have and don't get hung up on them.
 
phinds said:
The circles on a balloon analogy is really a very good one if you understand the limitations that it does have and don't get hung up on them.

I totally agree with this, the analogy is a good one, as long as you take into account dimensional representation and apply a 3d analogue to the 2d surface of the balloon. This can then be extended to the n dimension.

I would definitely look at some of the other anologues as well as collectively they can really develop your understanding on current cosmological thinking.
 
3I/ATLAS, also known as C/2025 N1 (ATLAS) and formerly designated as A11pl3Z, is an iinterstellar comet. It was discovered by the Asteroid Terrestrial-impact Last Alert System (ATLAS) station at Río Hurtado, Chile on 1 July 2025. Note: it was mentioned (as A11pl3Z) by DaveE in a new member's introductory thread. https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/brian-cox-lead-me-here.1081670/post-7274146 https://earthsky.org/space/new-interstellar-object-candidate-heading-toward-the-sun-a11pl3z/ One...

Similar threads

Back
Top