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Roger says:Given that the universe started with the big bang, an infinitesimally small and dense point, expanding to create the elements, can the universe be considered to be completely symmetrical and uniform? Would the influences on matter be completely equal during the expansion? If not, what caused the initial variances? What do you think?
Would the influences on matter be completely equal during the expansion? If not, what caused the initial variances?
Quote from: RogerWould the influences on matter be completely equal during the expansion? If not, what caused the initial variances?On very large scales, the universe is extremely uniform; studies of the Cosmic Background Microwave Radiation show that the temperature of the universe is the same in all directions to within 1 part in 100,000.Physicists think these small temperature variations came about due to quantum fluctuations in the early universe. Studying this slightly splotchy map of the sky has allowed cosmologists to estimate the composition of the early universe.See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_microwave_background#Features