What went bang and how? Nothing can't go bang, but as well as this fundamental question, there are other observable traits of the universe that suggest a big bang couldn't have been the mechanism.
Scientists agree there needs to have been a primer from outside of nature.
Something externally made everything come into existence, created the known laws of science, inaugurated matter, energy, time and information.
Something "wound everything" up and now everything is "winding down", with nothing new being added. The 1st & 2nd laws of thermodynamics show this.
You can't get something from nothing (now).
It's scientifically impossible for matter and energy to have always existed. Science shows they came about in a beginning.
1st law of thermodynamics. No more of either.
It's winding down (less useable energy more chaos)
2nd law….if it always existed it wouldn’t behave the way it does.
An explosion wouldn't result in the type of matter we have. The big bang theory is proven to be faulty
A (the) big bang would result in equal numbers of electrons and positrons, matter and anti-matter, but there is an extreme predominance of matter.
Planetary orbits, magnetism/gravities
Not possible from a central explosion
The James Webb telescope discredits the big bang theory based on rates of expansion.
The cause of this discrepancy remains a mystery. But Hubble data, encompassing a variety of cosmic objects that serve as distance markers, support the idea that something weird is going on, possibly involving brand new physics. NASA.
The Hubble telescope discredits the big bang theory based on the location of newly discovered galaxies.
They shouldn't exist according to the big bang models. NASA.
Like language and information, when did the natural laws come from?
When did the natural laws governing the physical world come into existence? Are we to believe these laws were also chance?