Difference between revisions of "Better Big Bang or A more Believable Singularity"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Imported from text file) |
(Imported from text file) |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
==Abstract== | ==Abstract== | ||
− | One singularity? You've got to be kidding. How about trillions and trillions and trillions of singularities. And I can hear all those voices out there shouting 'Contradiction in terms'. - but wait, impatience will get you nowhere! Here is a Better Big Bang - called BBB for short.<br /><br />Once upon a time, for every cubic centimetre of space there were more or less one million singularities, and they all looked just the same. They had a very special problem, and that is they were repulsive. - Now don't get me wrong because I don't mean in an offensive way; it's just that they repelled each other. (I'm calling them singularities because they are/were the smallest indivisible particle). <br />[[Category:Scientific Paper]] | + | One singularity? You've got to be kidding. How about trillions and trillions and trillions of singularities. And I can hear all those voices out there shouting 'Contradiction in terms'. - but wait, impatience will get you nowhere! Here is a Better Big Bang - called BBB for short.<br /><br />Once upon a time, for every cubic centimetre of space there were more or less one million singularities, and they all looked just the same. They had a very special problem, and that is they were repulsive. - Now don't get me wrong because I don't mean in an offensive way; it's just that they repelled each other. (I'm calling them singularities because they are/were the smallest indivisible particle). <br /> |
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Scientific Paper|better big bang believable singularity]] | ||
[[Category:Cosmology]] | [[Category:Cosmology]] |
Revision as of 10:05, 1 January 2017
Scientific Paper | |
---|---|
Title | Better Big Bang or A more Believable Singularity |
Author(s) | David Calder Hardy |
Keywords | {{{keywords}}} |
Journal | None |
Abstract
One singularity? You've got to be kidding. How about trillions and trillions and trillions of singularities. And I can hear all those voices out there shouting 'Contradiction in terms'. - but wait, impatience will get you nowhere! Here is a Better Big Bang - called BBB for short.
Once upon a time, for every cubic centimetre of space there were more or less one million singularities, and they all looked just the same. They had a very special problem, and that is they were repulsive. - Now don't get me wrong because I don't mean in an offensive way; it's just that they repelled each other. (I'm calling them singularities because they are/were the smallest indivisible particle).