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Physicists used to think that the universe had existed forever, unchangingly, because
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that's what their observations of the night sky suggested. Needless to say, this view
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clashed with the "origin" or "creation" stories of most major religions, which hold that the
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universe had a beginning.
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So it's not surprising that it was a Catholic priest, Georges Lemaître, who was one of
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the first major proponents of a new scientific viewpoint - that the universe DID have a beginning.
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Lemaître, of course, was also an excellent mathematician and scientist and based this
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conviction not (just) on his religious beliefs but upon new experimental evidence from Edwin
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Hubble that showed the universe was expanding. This evidence, combined with the mathematics
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of general relativity allowed Lemaître to "rewind" cosmic history and calculate that
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the farther back in time you go, the smaller the universe had to be. The natural conclusion
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is that everything we can currently see in the universe was at one point in time more
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or less at one point in space. Lemaître called this idea the "primeval atom", but of course
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today we know it as "the big bang theory".
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Except "big bang" is a horrible name - it would be much more accurate to call it "the
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everywhere stretch". Because one of the most common misconceptions about the big bang is
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that it implies that the entire universe was compressed into a single point from which
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it then somehow expanded into the surrounding... nothingness? It is true that the observable
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universe, that is, the part of the whole universe we can see from earth, WAS indeed shrunk down
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to a very very small bit of space, but that bit of space was NOT a single point, nor was
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the rest of the Universe also in that same bit of space.
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The explanation for this is the magical power of infinity. The whole universe is really
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big - current data show it's at least 20 times bigger than the observable universe, but that's
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just a lower bound - it might be infinite. And if you have an infinite amount of space,
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you can scale space down, shrink everything to minuscule proportions, and still have an
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infinite amount of space. Kind of like how you can zoom out as much as you want from
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a number line, but it'll still be an infinite number line.
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Essentially, space doesn't need anywhere to expand "into" because it can expand into itself
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and still have plenty of room. In fact, this is possible even if space turns out not to
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be infinite in size, though the reasons are complicated and have to do with the infinite
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differentiability of the metric of spacetime...
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But anyway, the event unfortunately known as the big bang was basically a time, long
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ago, when space was much more squeezed together, and the observable universe, that is, everything
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that we see from earth, was crammed into a very very small piece of space. Because the
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ENTIRE early universe was dense and hot everywhere, spacetime was curved everywhere and this curvature
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manifested itself as a rapid expansion of space throughout the universe. And although
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people call this "the big bang", it wasn't just big, it was everywhere. And it wasn't
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really an explosion - it was space stretching out. It's really quite unfortunate that "the
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Everywhere Stretch" isn't nearly as catchy as "the Big Bang".
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Which brings us to the "big bang singularity", which is an even horribler name because every
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single word is misleading. I mean, "singularity" seems to imply something that happened at
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a single point. Which isn't at all what it's referring to - it SHOULD be called "the part
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of the Everywhere Stretch where we don't know what we're talking about." Basically, our
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current physical models for the universe are unable to properly explain and predict what
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was happening at the very very beginning when the universe was super SUPER scaled down.
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But rather than call it the "time when we don't have a clue what was happening, ANYWHERE",
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for some reason we call it a "singularity".
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This ignorance, however, does conveniently answer the question What happened BEFORE the
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big bang? Because it tells us the question isn't well defined - back when space was so
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incredibly compressed and everything was ridiculously hot and dense, our mathematical models of
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the universe break down SO MUCH that "time" doesn't even make sense. It's kind of like
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how at the north pole, the concept of "north" breaks down - I mean, what's north of the
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north pole? The only thing you can say is that everywhere on earth is south of the north
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pole, or similarly everywhen in the universe is after... the beginning.
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But once time began, whenever that was, space expanded incredibly quickly all throughout
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the universe - for a little while. Then expansion slowed, the universe cooled, stuff happened,
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and after a few billion years, here we are.
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One thing we still DON'T know is why this Everywhere Stretching happened - that is,
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why did the universe start off in such a funny, compressed state, and why did it follow the
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seemingly arbitrary laws of physics that have governed its expansion and development ever
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since?
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For Georges Lemaître, this might be where God finally comes into the picture to explain
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the things science can't. Except that experimental evidence doesn't actually rule out the possibility
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that there may indeed be a time "before" the beginning, a previous age of the universe
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that ended when space collapsed in on itself, getting quite compressed and dense and hot,
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but not enough to mangle up our ideas of what time is. It would have then bounced back out,
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stretching in a fashion similar to what we call the big bang, but without the "we don't
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know what we're talking about" singularity part. So, physics may actually be nudging
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us back to the view that the Universe is eternal and didn't begin after all. In which case
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Professor Lemaître might have to rethink his interpretation of the words "in the beginning."