Big Bang - is there indeed a primordial egg?
I have been thinking a great deal about the big bang, and how there was supposedly a super dense primordial egg that exploded in less than a second to create the universe as we know it.
Is it feasable to think that perhaps black holes could be the key to this egg?
Suppose, hypothetically of cours, that the matter is not lost in the black hole, just condensed, into these primordial eggs, super condensed matter balls, perhaps they could be the engine of black holes?
and just as in there are always bigger and hungrier fish in the sea, could there perhaps be bigger and hungrier black holes that eat each other up until there is nothing left to eat? Nature proves that the strong shall survive, could there be a super strong black hole that has eaten most of the universe until there is nothing left to feed upon? If there is any sound reasoning in this theory, that last black hole would make the last ball of super condensed matter, what would happen to this ball if the machine(the black hole) that the engine (the egg) was running suddenly stopped, as if out of gas? (no pun intended)
Could this ball of super matter not hold itself together anymore without the machine running and causing the super gravity?
Would or could this ball blow up if it could not hold itself together anymore?
could something like this be the answer to what happened before the big bang?
Furthermore, if there was a super condensed ball of matter, would not the laws of space/time dictate that there would also be super condensed time going very fast? Would time be gauged differently as it is for our normal matter state?
I just want to clarify that I know almost nothing about astronomy, or particle physics, to emphasise my point, I would like to quote Popeye;
"I ain't no physikist, but I knows what matters."
and I am seriously wondering if there is any feasibility to this theory of the primordial egg. I would appreciate any feedback. Thank you for your time. 2:40am 07/31/08
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