Quote (the_rest @ Oct 27 2012 05:38pm)
is the theory of the chaos that says:
"suppose you have an empy room. the air molecules in that room DO have a chance (almost infinitely small! but only almost) that as they move around the room, at one time all the air molecules will be in one half the room, and the other half of the room will be void. Now if you could wait it out enough time, it will certainly happen. Only that it could take billions of years to wait it out ..."
same is for the big bang. before the big bang, all the molecules of the universe were sitting pretty in a huge ball. and after a few billions of billions of years, they went beserk suddenly (like the molecules in the room).
edit: now it is possible, that before the big bang, there was another universe, just like ours. and it went all collapsing into the big bang ball, because of the entropy. and after the big bang, our universe was re-born again (and it turned out similar to the previous one). and who knows how many times ?
I understand the example with the room is just used to show how on a long enough timeline anything that could happen will happen (probably), but is that actually true with them being in one half of the room? Wouldn't they diffuse through the room?