The story of our universe begins with an event so monumental that it redefined our understanding of existence: the Big Bang. Approximately 13.8 billion years ago, the cosmos as we know it erupted from a singularity—an infinitely dense point of energy and matter—creating time, space, and the vast cosmic expanse that continues to evolve today (Planck Collaboration, 2020). But how do we know this story, and what mysteries remain? Let’s explore the origins, evidence, and ongoing questions of the Big Bang.
Unlike a typical explosion that occurs within preexisting space, the Big Bang was an expansion of space itself. This expansion began from a state of extreme density and temperature, initiating the formation of elementary particles—quarks, gluons, and photons—that would later coalesce into protons, neutrons, and atoms (Alpher, Bethe, & Gamow, 1948).
In the first fraction of a second, a process known as inflation caused the universe to expand exponentially. Within minutes, light elements like hydrogen and helium formed in a process called Big Bang nucleosynthesis. However, it would take another 380,000 years for the universe to cool sufficiently for neutral atoms to form, allowing light to travel freely—marking the birth of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) radiation (Peebles, 2020).
While the Big Bang model is well-supported, it leaves unanswered questions:
Upcoming missions like the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope aim to explore these frontiers, probing the cosmic acceleration driven by dark energy and mapping the universe’s earliest structures (NASA, 2021).
Was Big Bang the start of our Universe? Or was an end of the previous Universe?