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Physics, Astronomy & Cosmology / Is the big bang impossible?
« on: 17/06/2018 21:03:59 »
Since heat and temprature is just atoms and molecules moving fast relative to each other. And since the warmer somthing is the faster they move then there has got to be an upper limit to temprature, just like there is a lower limit, 0 kelvin. Since nothing can move faster than light that has to be the upper limit, if not something else already limits it.
That's where I have a problem with the big bang theory because the theory revolves around the universe expanding from a single point aka a singularity. So the universe acording to the theory has been infintively small at one point. Since energy cannot be created, there has to be the same amount of energy in the universe from the point of the big bang to now. That means that since the only sort of energy that existed back then was heat there had to be an infinite temprature because all the heat was centered at one single point. But how can this be if there is an upper limit to temprature?
That's where I have a problem with the big bang theory because the theory revolves around the universe expanding from a single point aka a singularity. So the universe acording to the theory has been infintively small at one point. Since energy cannot be created, there has to be the same amount of energy in the universe from the point of the big bang to now. That means that since the only sort of energy that existed back then was heat there had to be an infinite temprature because all the heat was centered at one single point. But how can this be if there is an upper limit to temprature?