RE: Total stars in Universe is rougly equal to the total number (ever) of human cells.
May 17, 2018 at 2:55 am
(May 17, 2018 at 12:18 am)Godscreated Wrote:(May 16, 2018 at 4:00 am)Anomalocaris Wrote: There was no ball of matter. At the moment of Big Bang all what would later become matter were still undifferentiated positive energy. To the best of our current measurement, the total amount positive energy in the universe is exactly equal to the total amount of negative energy in the form of gravity, resulting In net energy of Big Bang being zero. The positive component of energy can be infinite, so long as it is exactly balanced by negative components of the same magnitude.
How can it be possible to have two infinite properties. Even if that were so it could not have been infinite since it was contained in one place.
GC
(May 16, 2018 at 3:07 pm)Jehanne Wrote: Of the 4,000 or so cosmologists who are actively publishing, can you cite anyone who supports your POV?
They do not say there was an infinite amount of energy.
GC
Why can it not have infinite properties?
You are not clear about the concept of the Big Bang. Big Bang is not about all the stuff in one place in space and then expanding out wards in space. If that were so, then it might seem difficult to imagine how an infinite amount of stuff in one place could expand outwards. Big bang is about matter and their precursors were already everywhere to start with, and then everywhere itself expanded. We only know the portion of everywhere we can observe was very small at the beginning, and pretty big now. But We do not know how much of everywhere there is beyond where we can observe. So we don’t know how Big the entire everywhere was before the Big Bang, we really do not know how Big the entire everywhere is now.
On the scenario about universe being infinite, space itself, or everywhere, started already being infinite. There was already precursor to matter everywhere in it. So even before the Big Bang there were already infinite amount of matter precursor distributed across infinite space. Then at the moment of Big Bang, either the entire infinite space, or a portion of it much larger than our currently observable space, we don’t know, radically expanded.