I've been really into reading about space and such but I find it hard sometimes to pick a starting point and go from there. The universe is such a huge place with so much to be learned and known and I would love to educate myself more on this. Do you recomend any books that could possibly get me started? I would enjoy learning as much about he cosmos as I possibly can, this stuff is just too interesting to ignore.
I think i read b4 that the big bang was actually a white hole. idk i forgot how the proposal said.Anyway as argued there is no observable evidence in our present universe that can prove white holes do exist. Likewise , the existince of white hole in this universe would tend to violate the existing laws of physics. However if such phenomenon do exist, I think its on another universe as the law of physics there would be entirely different.
Where is the center of the universe? Where is the edge?If there were a white hole "at the center of the universe" then why is it not visible at some point in the sky? So far, all the infrared and microwave sky surveys show a uniformly cold universe in all directions. Read up on the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation (CMB).
Atom: A Single Oxygen Atom's Journey from the Big Bang to Life on Earth...and BeyondAtom: A Single Oxygen Atom's Journey from the Big Bang to Life on Earth...and Beyond
If you've read into space and things of that nature I'm sure you've heard of the term absolute zero which is a temp of roughly -273°C....it is classified as a real temp but the strange part is it doesn't actually exist due to nothing actually being able reach that temp.. Below is a snippet of a site with this information (as well as some other very interesting information) that makes this claim, I can cite other sites if need be, confirmed it on a couple others:http://listverse.com/2010/11/04/10-strange-things-about-the-universe/"Theoretically, the lowest temperature that can be achieved is absolute zero, exactly −273.15°C, where the motion of all particles stops completely. However, you can never actually cool something to this temperature because, in quantum mechanics, every particle has a minimum energy, called “zero-point energy,” which you cannot get below Remarkably, this minimum energy doesn’t just apply to particles, but to any vacuum, whose energy is called “vacuum energy.” To show that this energy exists involves a rather simple experiment– take two metal plates in a vacuum, put them close together, and they will be attracted to each other. This is caused by the energy between the plates only being able to resonate at certain frequencies, while outside the plates the vacuum energy can resonate at pretty much any frequency. Because the energy outside the plates is greater than the energy between the plates, the plates are pushed towards each other. As the plates get closer together, the force increases, and at around a 10 nm separation this effect (called the Casimir effect) creates one atmosphere of pressure between them. Because the plates reduce the vacuum energy between them to below the normal zero-point energy, the space is said to have negative energy, which has some unusual properties"So if quantum mechanics makes it impossible to reach this temp why is it classified as a real temp? Is it simply to say "well, if you could reach this temp, this is when all particals would lose all motion"? And if all particals can never reach that temp and lose motion is it safe to say after all is said and done there will still be some dynamic to the universe itself? Never growing still and never stopping it's expansion?
VaeVictis:i find it funny that you even consider grammar a sign of intelligence, that itself is a very uneducated claim
is there an absolute highest possible temp wherein particles would just simply puff out or vaporize to nothingness? whats it called?