My understanding of things concerning the Universe and the Big Bang.
1. All of the hydrogen, lithium, and even space itself was created during the Big Bang. I wonder if space was already there and the Big Bang bonded time to it creating Quantum Mechanics? Could this then allow for a quantum fluctuation to then exist to create the Universe?
2. Inflation would have had to happen fast enough to prevent the collapse of the entire Universe into one giant black hole. I wonder if it were just a bit slower than predicted, slow enough perhaps for ultra massive stars millions of times the mass of the sun to form for an instant and then immediately collapse into quasars which could have lead to galaxy formation in the same way that Wolf-Rayet stars do today? Expansion would have to be fast enough to prevent gravity from binding them all together, but slow enough to allow such supermassive objects to form.
3. Since the Universe was so dense during those first few moments, would a hypothetical sound wave be able to travel through it? Not saying "God" per say, but just a side effect of that quantum fluctuation? A side effect that was able to reverberate about a tiny universe causing enough variability to create the CMB as an end result? A sound wave reflecting off the boundaries of the expanding universe unto itself both causing both interference and amplification?
1. All of the hydrogen, lithium, and even space itself was created during the Big Bang. I wonder if space was already there and the Big Bang bonded time to it creating Quantum Mechanics? Could this then allow for a quantum fluctuation to then exist to create the Universe?
2. Inflation would have had to happen fast enough to prevent the collapse of the entire Universe into one giant black hole. I wonder if it were just a bit slower than predicted, slow enough perhaps for ultra massive stars millions of times the mass of the sun to form for an instant and then immediately collapse into quasars which could have lead to galaxy formation in the same way that Wolf-Rayet stars do today? Expansion would have to be fast enough to prevent gravity from binding them all together, but slow enough to allow such supermassive objects to form.
3. Since the Universe was so dense during those first few moments, would a hypothetical sound wave be able to travel through it? Not saying "God" per say, but just a side effect of that quantum fluctuation? A side effect that was able to reverberate about a tiny universe causing enough variability to create the CMB as an end result? A sound wave reflecting off the boundaries of the expanding universe unto itself both causing both interference and amplification?