The concept of "before" the Big Bang is not well-defined as time as we know it began with the Big Bang itself. It is thought that the entire universe was in a hot, dense state at the moment of the Big Bang, with all matter and energy concentrated in a singularity.
There are two questions commonly asked:1. Is it real, or did God create the universe ex nihilo?2. Did the Big Bang create more than one universe?3. How can the big bang account for dark matter and dark energy?
Your question betrays a common misconception about the Big Bang -- that it was an explosion of dense matter into empty space. Despite many popular presentations that suggest this, it is SIMPLY WRONG. The Big Bang was an EXPANSION of space itself, and not into anything "out there," that took matter along for the "ride." The stuff that eventually became matter, as well as the space that was expanding, was there from the earliest time that we understand what was going on. Which is pretty far back -- we can understand our Universe from about 10^-32 seconds after the Big Bang and onwards after that. The time before then, however, is as unknown to us as the origin of lightning in the sky. So, if your question is, "What was the origin of the space and the stuff that eventually became matter?", then the answer is simple: we don't know.
String theory proposes that tiny strings are the fundamental building blocks of the universe. It is a theoretical framework that attempts to unify all fundamental forces of physics. However, it does not address events prior to the Big Bang as the conditions before the Big Bang are still a subject of speculation and debate in cosmology.
The concept of time as we know it began with the Big Bang, so it is not possible to determine what, if anything, existed before it. The laws of physics break down at the moment of the Big Bang, so it is currently beyond our scientific understanding to know what, if anything, preceded it.
When Matter and anti-matter collided the Big Bang came into existence. But something still remains a mystery that how did the Matter and anti-matter come.
the big bang
Scientists believe that all matter resulted from the big bang.
The concept of "before" the Big Bang is not well-defined as time as we know it began with the Big Bang itself. It is thought that the entire universe was in a hot, dense state at the moment of the Big Bang, with all matter and energy concentrated in a singularity.
According to our current understanding of physics, there was nothing "before" the big bang; not even time or space, so the notion of "before" is probably meaningless. We cannot imagine the conditions at the time of the big bang.
-So you believe in the Big Bang, where there was nothing and then it exploded? -Did you know the Big Bang theory has been scientifically disproved? -What was there before matter? -Do you know it can't be a vacuum because otherwise how does it carry electromagnetic radiation? -Where did matter come from? -Where did the laws of physics come from, and why are they the same throughout the universe? -What is time? -Where did it come from? -What was there before time? (That'll keep you going for a while.)
Boobs. There was one massive pair of jugs that became the universe. Yes. You sir, are a tit.
They formed early in the big bang before matter and energy decoupled.
There are two questions commonly asked:1. Is it real, or did God create the universe ex nihilo?2. Did the Big Bang create more than one universe?3. How can the big bang account for dark matter and dark energy?
There is no commonly agreed upon scientific answer to you question. The Big Bang theory does not presently postulate what took place before before the Big Bang occurred. That is not to say no answer awaits us - it is possible through continued scientific discovery that we will some day understand the events that pre-dated the Big Bang, if there were any.
For those who subscribe to the theory, YES.
All matter. All the matter that exists emerged from the primordial cosmological state that we call the 'Big Bang'.