Originally posted by Outside
if the big bang is traced back to the part where the universe was essentially just an infinitely small "dot" and then u go back further until there is nothing there...
how can u get something from nothing..sorry mite sound like a stupid question but u know
Was this question satisfactorily answered?
It seems to me to be a physics question (although it may have
theological spin-off as well, it has real physics content IMO)
Who here thinks that the premise is true as stated?
That is, that in fact "the big bang is traced back to the part where the universe was essentially just an infinitely small "dot"".
I believe that classic BB theories (that is, the Einstein/Friedmann equations) simply blow up and fail to work if pushed back too far.
They have a limit of applicability which is a sign of an inadequate mathematical construct. The theories do not predict an "infinitely small dot", they simply stop computing at a certain point. This is a common experience with scientific models and motivates people to fix the models.
In the past 3 or 4 years, several authors using a variety of approaches have improved on the classic BB theory (quantized BB or quantized Einstein/Friedmann equation) and gotten rid of the infinities.
When quantized, the model does not fail. Mechanisms explaining the onset of inflationary expansion are being investigated. In the quantized models there is not a "nothing" before the onset of the era of expansion we are witnessing and believe to have lasted some 13.7 or 14 billion years.
Perhaps other people here would like to disagree. It seems to me the proper answer to Outside is that his assumed premise is wrong.
The classic BB model had a singularity---a mathematical breakdown---when it reached its limit of applicability. Now the model is being improved and all the proposed improvements get rid of this failure and extend evolution of the universe back before the commencement of the current expansion era. In the current improved models the universe
never was an infinitely small dot or anything like that
a landmark paper was in 2001
Absence of Singularity in Loop Quantum Cosmology
Martin Bojowald
http://arxiv.org./abs/gr-qc/0102069
According to CiteBase this particular paper has been cited by 29 other papers since it was published.
this gives a rough index of the activity in this particular line of research