The great mystery at the heart of the Big Bang is to explain how an entire,
fantastically enormous universe of space and energy can materialise out of
nothing. The secret lies in one of the strangest facts about our cosmos. The laws
of physics demand the existence of something called "negative energy."
To help you get your head around this weird but crucial concept, let me draw
on a simple analogy. Imagine a man wants to build a hill on a flat piece of land.
The hill will represent the universe. To make this hill he digs a hole in the
ground and uses that soil to dig his hill. But of course he's not just making a hill
—he's also making a hole, in effect a negative version of the hill. The stuff that
was in the hole has now become the hill, so it all perfectly balances out. This is
the principle behind what happened at the beginning of the universe.
When the Big Bang produced a massive amount of positive energy…
It simultaneously produced the same amount of negative energy. In this way, the
positive and the negative add up to zero, always. It's another law of nature.
So where is all this negative energy today? It's in the third ingredient in our
cosmic cookbook: it's in space. This may sound odd, but according to the laws
of nature concerning gravity and motion—laws that are among the oldest in
science—space itself is a vast store of negative energy. Enough to ensure that
everything adds up to zero.
I'll admit that, unless mathematics is your thing, this is hard to grasp, but it's
true. The endless web of billions upon billions of galaxies, each pulling on each
other by the force of gravity, acts like a giant storage device. The universe is like
an enormous battery storing negative energy. The positive side of things—the
mass and energy we see today—is like the hill. The corresponding hole, or
negative side of things, is spread throughout space.
So what does this mean in our quest to find out if there is a God? It means that
if the universe adds up to nothing, then you don't need a God to create it. The
universe is the ultimate free lunch.
Since we know that the positive and the negative add up to zero, all we need
to do now is to work out what—or dare I say who—triggered the whole process
in the first place. What could cause the spontaneous appearance of a universe?
At first, it seems a baffling problem—after all, in our daily lives things don't just
materialise out of the blue. You can't just click your fingers and summon up a
cup of coffee when you feel like one. You have to make it out of other stuff like
coffee beans, water and perhaps some milk and sugar. But travel down into this
coffee cup—through the milk particles, down to the atomic level and right down
to the sub-atomic level, and you enter a world where conjuring something out of
nothing is possible. At least, for a short while. That's because, at this scale,
particles such as protons behave according to the laws of nature we call quantum
mechanics. And they really can appear at random, stick around for a while and
then vanish again, to reappear somewhere else.
Somewhere, I do agree with Mr. Stephen …but for the other things I'm completely against them what they've told, researched during his PhD and the other time… that doesn't satisfy my study ( well, as for now) and also, what actually he had gone through the end point, was just limited, in other words, was not the end actually …
Yeah! So much more here …to write for now as well…but let's talk about it with the next chapter;
This is all for now!
I am awesome …..💯