04-25-2004, 08:44 AM
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#16
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FFR Player
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 298
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Charish, I disagree. You can't say that with any certainty. That spark could have been the occasionally occuring 1-in-900-trillion-chance-of-staying-longer-than-a-millisecond pair of matter and antimatter atoms that randomly pop up in vacuum. If that pair stayed, it would have caused one heck of an explosion. That's the explanation for the Big Bang. Experiments have proved that the matter-antimatter pairs do naturally pop up and can be made, and even though they almost always disappear nearly instantly, if two stayed (possible) it would cause a massive chain reaction. We actually have the entire Big Bang mapped out.
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