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by serf
4338 days ago
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Is it no longer a valid concept that 'cold' universes are just another part of a cyclical 'era' in our universe, awaiting the quantum interactions to start the 'Big Bang' anew? With expansion, and the fact that there are objects in space without a practical gravitational bounds, does that imply a form of finality which may inhibit the QM interactions that took place during the initial 'Big Bang'? I've been of the understanding for some time now that the 'Big Bang' could not have happened without the vacuous void which was to exist preceding it, is my understanding incorrect? |
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Yes, cosmology is hard.