Scientist says Big Bang was not the beginning, but phase of change

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The phenomenon of universal origin known as the Big Bang is widely accepted as the moment when the great universal mass could no longer condense and expanded sharply at once. The event spawned the universe as we know it today, as well as the part we don't know yet.

However, a group of scientists from the University of Melbourne, Australia, have just come up with a new theory about the big explosion. According to author James Quach and his fellow scientists, the Big Bang must be viewed as a phase shift when a huge amorphous mass took shape.

To better illustrate, Quach compared the great amorphous universe to liquid water, chilled and suddenly crystallized in four dimensions of spacetime, similar to ice. “Think of the universe as liquid water. So as the universe cools down, the three physical dimensions and the only temporal one we know today emerge, ”says Quach.

The theory also points out that as the universe cools, it will be possible to find faults or "cracks" that must form, just as it does when water condenses on ice. Thus, it will be necessary to hope that scientists can find some of this evidence so that they can definitively prove this new theory. What do you think?

Source: Space.com