What Was There Before the Big Bang? 3 Good Hypotheses!

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Published 2024-04-13
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REFERENCES
Video: A Universe from nothing:    • What came before the Big Bang? Quantu...  
Video: Eternal Inflation:    • Eternal Inflation: The BEST MULTIVERS...  
Multiverse Theory: tinyurl.com/2cv2qxbm
Math proof universe can come from nothing: tinyurl.com/np2vrty
Paper of above: tinyurl.com/223t86z6
What came before big bang: tinyurl.com/y7g4pgwp

CHAPTERS
0:00 Big bang: Lamda-CDM model
3:09 Sponsor: ESET
4:22 Cyclic universe
5:33 How likely is cyclic model?
7:53 Multiverse: Eternal Inflation
11:27 Universe from nothing
15:23 Why can't we answer this question?

SUMMARY
What came before the Big Bang? what happened before the big bang? Since time is thought to have started at the big bang, asking what happened "before" is like asking what is North of the North pole? It may have no meaning. But there are three good theories.

One is the idea of a cyclic or 'bouncing' universe, where the Big Bang is just the latest of many beginnings, in an eternal series of cosmic expansions and contractions. The universe begins from an initial tiny state (a singularity?) in which all the matter and energy of the universe is contained in an infinitesimally small volume. The universe then expanded, and after 13.8 billion years is at its current state. It will keep expanding for perhaps billions more years, and then it will contract for another long period or time until it is tiny again. And then the cycle repeats itself over and over again for eternity.

But the current rate of expansion of the universe is not slowing down. It would need to stop and reverse at some time in the future. But that's not what we observe. If the lambda cdm model is incomplete, then the cyclic model could be correct.

Another hypothesis about what came before the Big Bang is a multiverse, where our universe is just one bubble in a frothy sea of universes, each with its own laws of physics. There are many types of multiverses, but this one stems from the theorized concept of eternal inflation.

The idea is that there exists an infinite spacetime that is expanding faster than the speed of light. This is what we call inflation. Inflation is believed to have occurred in our universe shortly after the Big Bang for an extremely short period of time But in this short time, the universe expanded by a factor of 10^78 in size. Since quantum mechanics ensures that there will always be some randomness, it’s possible that inflation could last a bit longer or shorter than expected in different parts of the universe.

In the 1980s, Paul Steinhardt, Andrei Linde and Alexander Vilenkin realized that the exponential expansion of cosmic inflation, although it stopped in our part of the universe, could continue in other unobservable parts of the universe. And if that’s the case, then the universe we are familiar with, may be a very small fraction of all that exists. It could have stoped in other parts of the universe, forming other bubble universes. This could go on for eternity. Our universe would be nothing but a very tiny part of an unimaginably larger whole.

Another theory is that our universe could have come from nothing. At the subatomic level in empty space, particles are popping in and out of existence all the time. These are virtual particles. They borrow energy from the vacuum and give it right back so quickly that no conservation laws are violated. Energy is conserved.

Cosmologists have speculated that even in a universe where no matter, space or time exists, as long as the laws of quantum mechanics exist, spacetime itself could have emerged in a quantum fluctuation, because in quantum mechanics, anything that is not forbidden by conservation laws necessarily happens with some finite probability. If we live in a closed universe, like a sphere is a closed universe, then all the positive energy of matter is perfectly balanced by gravity, which has negative energy. So, just like with virtual particles, no net energy is created.

Just as virtual particles come in and out of existence without breaking any conservation laws, a small empty space could come into existence probabilistically due to quantum fluctuations. And since time is connected to space, time would follow in this nucleation.

A scientific paper authored by 3 Chinese physicists, titled “spontaneous creation of the universe from nothing,” was published in 2014, which showed a mathematical proof of how this could happen.
#bigbang
#time
Why can’t we turn the clock back just a little bit further and figure out what happened just a tiny fraction of a second before the Big Bang? because current understanding of physics breaks down at the singularity, the moment that predates the Big Bang.

All Comments (21)
  • Your intro is perfect, a quick tease and straight to the topic after a couple of seconds. I love this channel
  • First of all, ARVIN ASH, you are amazing. You are a gift. You break down things that even a common non physicists or non Einsteinians can understand. This ultimately goes to the question why we exist or everything else. This sounds more like the water vapor bubble that is created when under water propellors rotate very fast but in reverse in the case of universe. The collapse of the bubble is so fast that they even crack the metals (in other words, they accelerate). What if that the universe is sprung up off an unstable empty space. The universe that we live in is NOT empty as physicist would know. In the case of water bubble, a force is applied. If we apply similar principle, we might encounter perpetual cycle in universe creation. How do we know if such perpetual motion of creation exists in the Universe? That leads to the question again as to why do we exists? I have kind of Ramanujan theory, but without proof, nothing matters. That poor Ramanujan.
  • @me1405
    No one on YouTube able to explain this kind of complicated information easily like you, you deserve to be funded.
  • @majusmanmne
    Hi Arvin, Let me extend my compliments to your unprecedented research work. Plus the communication skills that you have, truly stupendous !
  • @oneknight
    Great video and looking forward to the Starmus festival in Bratislava! :)
  • @Braddeman
    i love how you talk about all models and theories no matter how unlikely they are. it’s my favorite part of your videos. get all perspectives on each topic you bring up.
  • @WillArtie
    Wow! I did learn a new thing watching this vid! I have watched like all PBS Space Time, all Sabines vids, All Antons vids. And Fermilabs vids. And hundreds upon hundreds of random physics and space vids - and I still got a little something new here. Thank you!
  • @arenito2023
    Thank you Mr. Ash, great video ! Greetings from Brazil, right now !
  • @katalyst4stem
    Once again, a fantastic video capturing our uncertain reality. The graphics are truly mind-blowing. Amidst the awe, one pressing question arises: At the inception (just before or at the moment of the big bang), was there only energy or a mix of energy and fundamental particles? Grateful to anyone who can provide insight 😊
  • @dp055
    Best topic to make video upon 🙏🏼 thank you so much 🙏🏼
  • @jensjacobs9050
    The third hypothesis is the nothing-pothing-mothing model. Nothing vibrates creating pothing(positivenothing) and mothing(minusnothing) for a very short period of time. Then pothing and mothing recombine to form nothing again. And so on. Sometimes, when two neighbouring pothings are formed simultaneously, these two pothings combine due to attraction and will form a nonvisible entity of gravity (we call that dark matter) leaving the two mothings behind. These two mothings will drift away and form more space (we call that dark energy)
  • @cutepuppy9585
    Thank you for the video. I'm always curious about it and you explain some of the theories. Fascinating to my mind.
  • @sunshinecycling
    I may not always understand what is said on this channel, but I am still fascinated and watch anyway.