Psychology, asked by priyanshumishramps21, 5 months ago

From the Beginning of Time

1. Why does anything exist? In the beginning there was nothing. How did something come from nothing?

2. How was the universe formed?

3. Why was it created, and why like this?

4. What existed before the universe?

5. Was there ever a time when nothing existed or has something always been in existence?

6. Are we alone in the universe?

Answers

Answered by JohnRay21
0

Your questions are very deep and all I can say is that the universe is full of mysteries that cannot be fully explained by our vocabulary/language

Answered by souravkoley3599
1

Answer:

1)

Quantum mechanics tells us that "nothing" is inherently unstable, so the initial leap from nothing to something may have been inevitable. Then the resulting tiny bubble of space-time could have burgeoned into a massive, busy universe, thanks to inflation.

2)Our universe began with an explosion of space itself - the Big Bang. Starting from extremely high density and temperature, space expanded, the universe cooled, and the simplest elements formed.

3) Well__My name is Hayfah Talhah Muhammad. Leave, go and laugh to your fill. But know__ I was created like this! And I believe it's a blessing in disguise. Why could'nt everyone understand? Why?" She wiped away her tears with her hijab, which were not stopping anytime from now. She left him confused, what is she going through? Is everyone making fun of her? But why? Nothing is wrong with her voice. He love her voice!. A story on how a lady struggles through pain until She finds true love!

4) It's possible that before the Big Bang, the universe was an infinite stretch of an ultrahot, dense material, persisting in a steady state until, for some reason, the Big Bang occured. This extra-dense universe may have been governed by quantum mechanics, the physics of the extremely small scale, Carroll said.

5) Memory foam was initially developed under a NASA contract for a space program. It was later adapted by mattress manufacturers to...

6) Measured edge to edge, the universe as we know it stretches some 93 billion light-years across. That unfathomable expanse contains 2 trillion galaxies, each shining with millions of stars and dotted with more planets than you can imagine. Given all that real estate, it seems unlikely we're alone. Yet in all of human history, we've found nothing to suggest otherwise.

Thanks....

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