Qalaxia QA Bot
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I found an answer from www.quora.com

If the universe is infinite in extent does that mean that the big bang ...


If the universe is infinite in extent does that mean that the big bang was a local event? .... In the following theory, yes, it was a local event.


For more information, see If the universe is infinite in extent does that mean that the big bang ...

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I found an answer from www.bbc.com

Religion and science - Revision 3 - GCSE Religious Studies - BBC ...


The big bang theory of the origin of the universe ... and energy in the universe was at a point of infinite density and temperature. ... Not all scientists agree with the Big Bang theory, but many of their objections are to do with the details within the ... 1 and Genesis 2 as two totally separate stories that have a similar meaning.


For more information, see Religion and science - Revision 3 - GCSE Religious Studies - BBC ...

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I found an answer from www.nationalgeographic.com

The origins of the universe facts and information


Jan 18, 2017 ... The most popular theory of our universe's origin centers on a cosmic ... The best- supported theory of our universe's origin centers on an event known as the big bang. ... Further work has helped clarify the big bang's tempo. .... the most massive in the Local Group of galaxies that includes our Milky Way. …


For more information, see The origins of the universe facts and information

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I found an answer from www.britannica.com

universe | Definition & Facts | Britannica.com


May 1, 2019 ... Universe: Universe, the whole cosmic system of matter and energy of which Earth is a part. ... matter of the universe in a primal “big bang” to the gathering on Earth of ... The intrinsic harmony of such a worldview has great philosophical .... For the church, there was definitely a creation event, and infinity was ...


For more information, see universe | Definition & Facts | Britannica.com

Qalaxia Knowlege Bot
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I found an answer from en.wikipedia.org

Expansion of the universe - Wikipedia


The expansion of the universe is the increase of the distance between two distant parts of the universe with time. It is an intrinsic expansion whereby the scale of space itself changes. The universe does not expand "into" anything and does not require space to ... Metric expansion is a key feature of Big Bang cosmology, is modeled ...


For more information, see Expansion of the universe - Wikipedia

Qalaxia Knowlege Bot
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I found an answer from www.scientificamerican.com

According to the big bang theory, all the matter in the universe ...


First, how was matter able to get out of the big-bang singularity? ... have formed from local, unusually dense regions in the very early universe. ... whereas outside the event horizon, light can escape to infinity if it is traveling in the right direction.


For more information, see According to the big bang theory, all the matter in the universe ...

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I found an answer from wmap.gsfc.nasa.gov

Foundations of Big Bang Cosmology


Jan 24, 2014 ... The Big Bang model of cosmology rests on two key ideas that date back to the ... in extent; it can be "negatively" curved like a saddle and infinite in extent; or it ... than that which is portrayed here, while still having the same local curvature. ... is that the universe started from a very small volume, an event later ...


For more information, see Foundations of Big Bang Cosmology

Corey Walker
-1

I guess It was a local event? Yet the universe doesn't really have a center though. We can't leave the universe. Say the universe is a balloon, and we are ants standing on that balloon. We can only be on the surface, and the balloon is constantly expanding. 1/infinity is the same as 1 billion/infinity, so you can say that to every galaxy it was a local event.(my brain was going to explode!)

Sangeetha Pulapaka
0
Yes, I agree that there is no center to the universe. But, there is also no void around the universe, The big bang itself is the entire universe. According to the balloon analogy, there is no center and no edge in the universe. The galaxies expand when the universe expands. The big bang is like the balloon expanding. The balloon is the entire universe. There is nothing outside of the universe. So, we are a part of the balloon and cannot stand on it. We cannot be on the surface as there is no void. The problem with balloon analogy though is that it's a two-dimensional analogy for a three-dimensional situation. http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/balloon0.html