Big-Bang pretty much explain the origin of universe, but still many people don't believe it. Isn't it possible that our universe come out of a white hole which have been pulled out from a black hole that was in some other universe?
Asked
Active
Viewed 272 times
-6
-
By "formation" do you mean "origin" or "the development of the structure that we see today"? Those are two different things, and will elicit different answers. – garyp Jul 18 '16 at 17:43
-
I mean the origin (how it was created). – Vishnu JK Jul 18 '16 at 17:45
-
why you didnt consider that black hole was pulled out of another black hole which was pulled out of a white hole? – Jul 18 '16 at 17:49
-
@(LOL*11) Lol that was so much beyond my level. Had a hard time figuring it out ;) – Vishnu JK Jul 18 '16 at 17:54
-
Related: Did the Big Bang happen at a point? – John Rennie Jul 18 '16 at 18:40
-
False and false. – CuriousOne Jul 18 '16 at 19:20
-
Can't understand what is unclear in this. – Vishnu JK Jul 19 '16 at 09:15
-
To reopen this post (v3) consider to only ask only one question. – Qmechanic Jul 19 '16 at 14:10
-
Possible duplicates: http://physics.stackexchange.com/q/11136/2451 and links therein. – Qmechanic Jul 19 '16 at 15:38
1 Answers
1
No one knows.
One other thing ... the big bang hypothesis does not explain the origin of the universe (although I recognize that you used the word "formation", not "origin", but I'm not sure what exactly you meant by "formation"). It explains what happens after a certain epoch in our universe's history. What happens before that is completely unknown. What we call the big bang might occur a tiny fraction of a second before the creation of the universe, or many billions of years after the creation of the universe. All that assuming that the universe had a creation event.

garyp
- 22,210