How accurate is this short summary of physics history?

In summary, the conversation discusses the age and formation of the universe, including the Big Bang, formation of stars and galaxies, and the creation and evolution of life on Earth. Some points of discussion include the expansion and cooling of the universe, the process of nuclear fusion in stars, and the formation of planets through molecular clouds and gravity. The evolution of life is also discussed, including the development of DNA and the theory of evolution. Some potential areas for further discussion or clarification are mentioned, such as the transition from the Big Bang to star formation, the process of a star's death, and the definition of multi-cellular life.
  • #1
92sWoK89
2
0
For personal purposes, I'm trying to summarize the last 14 billion years. How accurate is the following? Any thoughts welcome, thanks!

Most scientists believe the universe is at least 14 billion years old based on evidence about the relative movement and expansion of galaxies and other information. And further, that at that time, all the energy in the universe was concentrated in one point which exploded in a very hot Big Bang. There is no evidence for what, if anything, existed before the Big Bang, or if the initial conditions were somehow created. The theory continues that as the universe expanded from the Big Bang point, it cooled down and gravity pulled together stars into galaxies.

A star is a massive ball of hydrogen and helium (both created in the Big Bang), the two most basic chemical elements. The star fuses these two elements in a process called nuclear fusion which produces heat, light, and forges other chemical elements. As the star ages, it produces more and more heat and light, until it collapses into either a dwarf or a supernovae, and in the latter case, finally a neutron star or black hole. A supernovae expels most of its contents during an explosion. It is also so hot, that it is the source of the rest of the chemical elements, and may be the source of more complex things such as the origins or building blocks of life itself – molecules.

The Earth, or The World, is the third closest of eight planets to The Sun, which together make up our solar system (which is part of the Milky Way Galaxy of solar systems). The planets orbit around the sun due to its gravity. The planets were created from molecular clouds after star formation, and coalesced due to gravity. The Earth is about 4.5 billion years old.

I can't philosophically describe how life is different than an inanimate object like a rock, but many scientists consider life to be a form of chemistry leading to a self-sustaining growth and reproduction process. It is believed that life on Earth started as a self-replicating molecule about 4 billion years ago. Further, about 3.5 billion years ago, DNA was formed which was an instruction set for building the proteins of a self-replicating organism. About 3 billion years ago, photosynthesis, the production of energy from light, started, with oxygen as a by-product.

A cell is the basic unit of life and encapsulates the DNA, energy production, and other things. It is believed that multi-cellular life (cells that can reproduces themselves using DNA) began on Earth about 600 million years ago. The theory of evolution states that multi-cellular life evolved into different species of organisms based on mutations and natural selection. The cambrian explosion occurred about 570 million years ago and included many new animals, particularly under water. About 475 million years ago plants appeared on land. About 200 million years ago, mammals (warm-blooded vertebrae with hair, milking females, and birthing live young) appeared on land.

About 65 million years ago, primates appeared (e.g. monkeys). About 2.5 million years ago, the precursor primate to humans appeared. About 200,000 years ago, homosapiens (humans) appeared, living as hunters and gatherers (a distinct but related animal, neanderthal appeared at about the same time, but was extinct by about 30,000 years ago). About 10,000 years ago, trade, agriculture, language, and technology bloomed human societies.
 
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  • #2
Just a few thing I noticed:

The theory continues that as the universe expanded from the Big Bang point, it cooled down and gravity pulled together stars into galaxies.

You jumped from Big-Bang to stars and galaxies. There is a big missing piece here, mainly how you get from the Big-Bang to stars (Big-Bang to matter to stars to galaxies?)

As the star ages, it produces more and more heat and light, until it collapses into either a dwarf or a supernovae

“produces more and more heat” and “until it collapses” doesn’t really follow logically. You might want to fill in some more information (until it runs out of fuel and collapses due to its gravity?). Also “collapses into supernovae”? I know they are related but a collapse is quite opposite of a huge explosion (supernovae). Might want to expand slightly on this (collapses so violently that it rebounds into a great explosion, a supernovae?...although I’m not sure if that’s actually what happens :) )

Also, you say the star forges “other chemical elements” and a supernovae is the “source of the rest of the chemical elements”. You might want to specify which elements a star forges (light elements or light elements up until iron) and which ones a supernovae (heavy elements or elements heavier than iron).

may be the source of more complex things such as the origins or building blocks of life itself – molecules.
Is this true? I don’t know, but it sounds like speculation.

It is believed that multi-cellular life (cells that can reproduces themselves using DNA)

Sounds like your definition of multi-cellular life is wrong here, or way too general. (Single-cellular life also reproduces using DNA).

Besides that I see nothing fundamentally wrong with it.
 
  • #3
92sWoK89 said:
For personal purposes, I'm trying to summarize the last 14 billion years. How accurate is the following? Any thoughts welcome, thanks!

Most scientists believe the universe is at least 14 billion years old based on evidence about the relative movement and expansion of galaxies and other information. And further, that at that time, all the energy in the universe was concentrated in one point which exploded in a very hot Big Bang. There is no evidence for what, if anything, existed before the Big Bang, or if the initial conditions were somehow created. The theory continues that as the universe expanded from the Big Bang point, it cooled down and gravity pulled together stars into galaxies.

A more accurate description would be that the universe cooled down and formed massive amounts of Hydrogen and Helium which was then pulled together by gravity to form galaxies. The gas continued to collapse within galaxies to form stars.

A star is a massive ball of hydrogen and helium (both created in the Big Bang), the two most basic chemical elements. The star fuses these two elements in a process called nuclear fusion which produces heat, light, and forges other chemical elements. As the star ages, it produces more and more heat and light, until it collapses into either a dwarf or a supernovae, and in the latter case, finally a neutron star or black hole. A supernovae expels most of its contents during an explosion. It is also so hot, that it is the source of the rest of the chemical elements, and may be the source of more complex things such as the origins or building blocks of life itself – molecules.

I think the last sentence is unnecessary. Also, my personal opinion would be to change the description of the stars aging to something like this: "As a star ages, it begines to run out of fuel. Small stars swell into Red Giants before running out of fuel and collapsing to small hot balls of non-fusing gas called a White Dwarf. Larger stars can fuse elements other than Hydrogen and Helium together, with the most massive ones producing elements up to Iron before they run out of fuel and explode into supernovas, leaving behind a very dense core called a Neutron Star or collapsing into a Black hole."

The Earth, or The World, is the third closest of eight planets to The Sun, which together make up our solar system (which is part of the Milky Way Galaxy of solar systems). The planets orbit around the sun due to its gravity. The planets were created from molecular clouds after star formation, and coalesced due to gravity. The Earth is about 4.5 billion years old.

While pretty much correct, I don't really like the layout here. I'd say something along the lines of: "The solar system was formed by a collapsing cloud of gas about 4.5 billion years ago. Most of the gas formed the sun with the remaining small percent forming the planets." Then add the rest as you see fit.

I can't philosophically describe how life is different than an inanimate object like a rock, but many scientists consider life to be a form of chemistry leading to a self-sustaining growth and reproduction process. It is believed that life on Earth started as a self-replicating molecule about 4 billion years ago. Further, about 3.5 billion years ago, DNA was formed which was an instruction set for building the proteins of a self-replicating organism. About 3 billion years ago, photosynthesis, the production of energy from light, started, with oxygen as a by-product.

This looks pretty good to me. I'd just double check your numbers just in case.

The rest of it looks alright. I'd be sure to focus on the presentation of it. The actual layout of the sentences and such to make it look and read a little better.
 
  • #4
Thanks for both replies!
 
  • #6
You mention that the universe was created by the Big Bang which was a point source of energy, but cosmologists are not entirely sure this is true. Today, the universe appears to be perfectly flat, meaning it is infinite and was always infinite--implying the big bang was an "explosion" of a point source of infinite energy density at every point in the universe, which was diluted by the expansion of the universe.

Also, if you believe Inflation theory: the universe was more likely either closed or open during the big bang, and a early period of rapid inflation caused the universe to be approximately flat. Here there are two theories as to the nature of the big bang. If the universe was open to begin with, it would be described by hyperbolic geometry and would be infinite, even at the Big Bang. If it were closed to begin with, it would be described by spherical geometry, and would be a finite size. This latter case would result in a point source Big Bang, so it's very possible, but we have no way of being able to tell unless we could retrieve information about the density of the universe before about 10-36s after the BB.
 
  • #7
This is all you need to know:

Our whole universe was in a hot dense state,
Then nearly fourteen billion years ago expansion started. Wait...
The Earth began to cool,
The autotrophs began to drool,
Neanderthals developed tools,
We built a wall (we built the pyramids),
Math, science, history, unraveling the mysteries,
That all started with the big bang!
 
  • #8
soothsayer said:
...implying the big bang was an "explosion" of a point source
No.

The BB was not an "explosion".
 
  • #9
DaveC426913 said:
No.

The BB was not an "explosion".

Hence the quotation marks.
 
  • #10
soothsayer said:
Hence the quotation marks.

Saying something is something when it is not - is not ameliorated by putting quotes around the thing it is not.

Like if I said Bob is an "idiot". :devil:


The Big Bang was neither an explosion nor an "explosion"; that is a highly misleading claim.
I know. I made the same mistake here (when I was young a foolish) and got sternly corrected.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #11
DaveC426913 said:
I know. I made the same mistake here (when I was young a foolish) and got sternly corrected.

Back in his day it was the Small Pop!
 
  • #12
Drakkith said:
Back in his day it was the Small Pop!

Back in my day it was breaking news... :biggrin:
 
  • #13
DaveC426913 said:
This is all you need to know:

Our whole universe was in a hot dense state,
Then nearly fourteen billion years ago expansion started. Wait...
The Earth began to cool,
The autotrophs began to drool,
Neanderthals developed tools,
We built a wall (we built the pyramids),
Math, science, history, unraveling the mysteries,
That all started with the big bang!

Yes to this! :biggrin:
 
  • #14
I would say that the second paragraph is somewhat superfluous, it switches from the past in paragraph 1, to the present in paragraph 2, then to the past again in paragraph 3.

Other than that, it is a fairly reasonable summary, depending on exactly what message you wish to send of course.

Claude.

P.S. DaveC, gold.
 
  • #15
DaveC426913 said:
This is all you need to know:

Our whole universe was in a hot dense state,
Then nearly fourteen billion years ago expansion started. Wait...
The Earth began to cool,
The autotrophs began to drool,
Neanderthals developed tools,
We built a wall (we built the pyramids),
Math, science, history, unraveling the mysteries,
That all started with the big bang!

I hope you had to google that or have you learned it off by heart?
 
  • #16
rc1102 said:
I hope you had to google that or have you learned it off by heart?

We recite every day. (My wife always muddles up the final BANG! though. There's two. She puts the emphasis on the wrong one.) :biggrin:
 
  • #17
So it's ok to call it the "Big Bang", but not ok to say "explosion"?? :P

You're right, explosion is not an accurate description for the Big Bang, and I understand why, (my Cosmo professor this year had to drill that into our heads a few times), it's just a convenient simplification for "infinitely hot and dense state that expanded and cooled with the universe." In the future, I'll be sure to state it more aptly, lest my slip-up again not go unnoticed by a smarter physicist than I ;)
 

1. How do we know that this summary of physics history is accurate?

There are multiple ways to ensure the accuracy of a summary of physics history. One way is to cross-reference the information with reputable sources and compare the details and dates. Another way is to consult with experts in the field and get their feedback on the accuracy of the summary.

2. Can a short summary truly capture the complexity of physics history?

While a short summary may not be able to cover every single detail and event in physics history, it can provide a general overview and highlight the key discoveries and advancements that have shaped the field. It can serve as a starting point for further exploration and understanding of the subject.

3. How can we ensure that the information in this summary is up-to-date?

As with any field of study, physics is constantly evolving and new discoveries are being made. It is important to regularly review and update the summary to reflect the latest information and advancements in the field. Additionally, consulting with experts and reputable sources can help ensure the accuracy and timeliness of the information.

4. Are there any biases or omissions in this summary of physics history?

It is always important to critically evaluate any information, including a summary of physics history, for potential biases or omissions. One way to do this is to seek out multiple sources and compare the information. It is also helpful to consider the perspective and background of the author of the summary.

5. Is this summary of physics history suitable for all levels of understanding?

This may depend on the specific summary and the intended audience. Some summaries may be geared towards a general audience and therefore may not include complex equations or technical jargon. Others may be more detailed and suited for those with a background in physics. It is important to consider the intended purpose and audience of the summary when assessing its suitability for different levels of understanding.

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