The standard ΛCDM model describes the Big Bang hypothesis.
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Professor Enrique Gaztañaga |
In their paper, Enrique Gaztañaga and colleagues from the University of Portsmouth ask, "What if the Big Bang wasn't the beginning? What if our Universe had emerged from something else, something more familiar and yet radically different?"
"Our calculations suggest that the Big Bang was not the beginning of everything, but rather the result of a gravitational collapse that generated a massive black hole followed by a 'bounce' inside, which means that our Universe may have emerged from the interior of a black hole formed within a larger parent universe."
Rather than the birth of the Universe being from nothing, it is the continuation of a cosmic cycle shaped by gravity, quantum mechanics, and the deep interconnections between them.
This 'Black Hole Universe' presents a radically different view of cosmic origins, grounded entirely in known physics and observations.
Quoting Professor Gaztañaga, "The Big Bang model begins with a point of infinite density where the laws of physics break down. This is a deep theoretical problem that suggests the beginning of the Universe is not fully understood."
"We've questioned that model and tackled questions from a different angle - by looking inward instead of outward. Instead of starting with an expanding Universe and asking how it began, we considered what happens when an overdensity of matter collapses under gravity."
"We've shown that gravitational collapse does not have to end in a singularity (as in the Big Bang) and found that a collapsing cloud of matter can reach a high-density state and then bounce, rebounding outward into a new expanding phase.
"Crucially, this bounce occurs entirely within the framework of general relativity, combined with the basic principles of quantum mechanics. What emerges on the other side of the bounce is a Universe remarkably like our own. Even more surprisingly, the rebound naturally produces a phase of accelerated expansion driven not by a hypothetical field but by the physics of the bounce itself."
"We now have a fully worked-out solution that shows the bounce is not only possible - it's inevitable under the right conditions. One of the strengths of this model is that it makes predictions that can be thoroughly tested. And what's more, this new model has also revealed that the Universe is slightly curved, like the surface of the Earth."
The ARRAKIHS* ESA space mission may answer questions and test predictions of the Black Hole Universe.
*Wikipedia knows: The mission is named after a planet, Arrakis, from the science fiction novel Dune. The name is a backronym of "Analysis of Resolved Remnants of Accreted galaxies as a Key Instrument for Halo Surveys.
ARRAKIHS will detect ultra-low surface brightness structures in the outskirts of galaxies, regions where the fossil record of galaxy formation and dark matter assembly is preserved. Studying these faint features will reveal how galaxies grow and evolve. They may also hold clues to the nature of dark matter and the Universe's initial conditions, particularly if they differ from those predicted by the standard ΛCDM model.
Science remains exciting.
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