Our universe began with The Big Bang. But what existed before the Big Bang?
From the University of
Texas at Austin, researchers propose that dark matter might have been created
during a brief, explosive period of expansion called “Cosmic Inflation,” which
occurred just before the Big Bang. The universe, at that point, would have
consisted of mostly dark matter, completely undetectable to our eyes.
Scientists believe that
dark matter makes up roughly 85% of all matter. This study suggests that the
substance existed before the event that many consider the beginning of time.
The model for the study
assumes that dark matter is successfully produced during inflation. In most
models, anything that is created during inflation is thinned away by the
expansion of the universe until there is essentially nothing left.
The research introduces
a mechanism called WIFI (Warm Inflation Freeze-In), which suggests that dark
matter could have been generated during the universe’s earliest moments through
rare interactions within an incredibly hot and energetic environment.
Cosmologists understand
the universe’s beginning was more complex than a simple explosive moment.
Before the Big Bang, matter and energy were compressed into an incredibly dense
state that physicists struggle to describe. A fraction of a second of rapid
expansion preceded the Big Bang, setting the stage for everything that would
follow.
In this new model, the
quantum field driving inflation loses some energy to radiation, which then
produces dark matter particles through a process called ‘freeze-in’. According
to this research, all the dark matter that exists today could have been created
during that brief inflationary period.
The study focused on
the production of dark matter, but WIFI suggests the production of other
particles that could play a role in the early universe’s evolution.
Although currently
unconfirmable through direct observation, the theory opens exciting new avenues
for exploring the universe’s fundamental building blocks. The researchers are
optimistic that upcoming experiments studying the Cosmic Microwave Background
and large sale universal structures could provide validation.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/scientists-may-finally-know-what-existed-before-the-big-bang/ar-AA1vY9Mf?ocid=hpmsn&cvid=51d4d625bcc24515f51422de711080a7&ei=66