🧵 What if the big bang was a particle decay?
Anonymous at Thu, 4 Apr 2024 18:07:56 UTC No. 16112313
I googled this idea and nobody even asked a quora question about it. So i'm shitting the idea onto you so that you might be able to turn it into a real question.
What if the big bang was a particle decay? Could protons be like the neutrinos of some super particle?
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 01:36:10 UTC No. 16112884
Doesn't anyone even have a thought?
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 01:42:07 UTC No. 16112890
The big bang was your mom farting
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 01:52:20 UTC No. 16112908
>>16112313
How massive that particle would have to be should be enough to convince you it can't be. But let's put that aside for a second.
Then where did this particle come from?
How does envisioning it as a decaying particle change anything measurably or philosophically?
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 01:56:28 UTC No. 16112916
>>16112908
Suppose as the universe gets colder and sparser formerly stable particles become unstable and can decay.
That when the universe gets cold and sparse enough protons start decaying and their decay products create a whole new generation to the universe that exists on a time and space scale that we would consider infinite.
It would also explain why there isn't a ton of antimatter. They *weren't* created in equal measure. It was some kind of matter particle that decayed into other matter particles.
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 01:59:43 UTC No. 16112924
By the way 'the mass of that particle should be enough to convince you it can't be'.
If we were all made out of neutrinos, the idea of a proton would be absurd. This uselessly huge particle that *may* form structures that exist on time scales that are uselessly long... to creatures on our scale.
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:02:34 UTC No. 16112933
If there was a whoville made of neutrinos... could we find it?
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:06:22 UTC No. 16112943
>>16112916
Correct and God, the great mover, started it all
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:08:34 UTC No. 16112950
Also, real particle physicists might be able to tell me what the particle is that would be as big as protons are to neutrinos, and how that object would need to behave to spin off 10^80 protons when it decayed.
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:09:42 UTC No. 16112952
>hay guise!!! i totally know everything about the entire universe!!!!
>i'm soooooo smart and important!!!!
>what, real meaningful useful accomplishments??
>no i can't do that
>but trust me, i really do know everything about the entire universe
nice schizo coping mechanism, loser
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:10:59 UTC No. 16112955
>>16112952
Are you talking to yourself? We're discussing particle physics.
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:14:07 UTC No. 16112962
>>16112952
People who are obsessed with masturbation have a lot of other masturbatory fantasies to compliment their sexual ones
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:19:35 UTC No. 16112978
>>16112916
>Suppose as the universe gets colder and sparser formerly stable particles become unstable and can decay.
And a Proton would decay into what? A whole new universe of particles? If that could happen, it would have by now. There aren't smaller particles for it to decay into that would be stable in the long run. If that could happen, there could be a whole universe within a proton at a scale near planck length, but we don't see loss of energy in that way. We also don't have that subuniverse constrained on its own. Enjoy being high, but there's nothing to it
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:20:36 UTC No. 16112981
>>16112967
Fuck off "the acorn"
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 02:25:45 UTC No. 16112987
Something you could actually tell me is how possible it is for a particle to decay into many small particles as opposed to a slightly smaller particle and a few very tiny particles.
Because as i understand it, most particle decays happen like that. Which means we should be able to find an enormous particle that all of these tiny particles spun off from.
But perhaps we can't recognize it. Like, this won't just be a huge ball out in space. It will just be a region that behaves like a particle.
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 03:38:14 UTC No. 16113069
>>16112313
Not science dude, you cant do any experiments about this, or any observations for that matter. Feel free to improv any slop and get michio kaku to narrate it
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 03:39:57 UTC No. 16113074
>>16113069
I am forwarding the idea to you because i can't find anyone asking about it online.
Help me think up an experiment. Or you could formulate your own experiment and become famous.
Anonymous at Fri, 5 Apr 2024 05:20:53 UTC No. 16113160
>>16112313
the big bang was god microwaving the universe