Big Bang at every point in space?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the concept of the Big Bang occurring at every point in space, challenging the traditional view of an explosion from a single point. It clarifies that the Big Bang was not an explosion in the conventional sense but the origin of time and space, with the entire observable universe contained in a singularity that rapidly expanded. Each point in space moved away from every other point, leading to the formation of matter after about 300,000 years as the universe cooled. The conversation also notes that the term "Big Bang" can be misleading, as it was originally coined in a mocking context. The universe continues to expand, with recent observations suggesting that this expansion is accelerating.
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How does a Big Bang occur at every point in space. It is easy to comprehend something exploding at a point and sending everything outwards, but if something explodes (if we are even talking about the Universe exploding) at every point on and in itself, wouldn't it blow itself up or something, because every point is exploding then they would keep each other from expanding into each other and rather outwards. Seems like I just answered myself. Nevertheless, any thoughts?
 
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The "Big Bang" is poorly named. It causes confusion. Actually the name came from someone (Hoyle?) who was mocking the theory. But the name stuck.

As Ambitwistor explained, it was nothing like an explosion we're familiar with. It was the beginning of time and space in our observable universe. At time = 0 (the beginning), the entire observable universe was contained within some yet-to-be-accurately-described seed (sometimes called the Big Bang singularity). Every point of space in the universe was contained in that seed (or perhaps it was just 1 point). Starting from the first instant of time, this seed rapidly expanded. Every point of space got farther apart from every other point everywhere in the universe. This Big Bang was happening everywhere in our universe. Of course, things looked very different. It wasn't until another 300,000 years after the beginning that the whole universe expanded and cooled enough for matter to form out of the soup of fundamental subatomic particles. Since the energy of the Bang, and thereby the fundamental particles, was everywhere in the universe, matter formed everywhere in the universe (i.e., matter was not exploded out from a central point into empty space). Once there was matter, gravity could pull that stuff together to form stars and galaxies. The universe is still coasting from the Big Bang event...still expanding in all direction (except for some localized areas where gravity wins out over expansion...like within a galaxy). A recent odd discovery is that the expansion now seems to be accelerating. But that is another story.
 
This cleared things up, thanks. Maybe every point didn't grow apart from each other, but rather grew smaller, making it seem as they grew farther apart. :O
 
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