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And this is EHVT, I share this with Science and TechNet, and I'm translating from Toronto to Toronto, Saturday evening, at my time here at 9pm, translates into 01 hours GMT. And this next topic here is about the big bang. They're trying to narrow down when it actually happened, but the other question too is where does the big bang happen? And this gets a little bit more challenging. There's some misconceptions about the big bang and the singularity, etc., etc., but we'll talk about that in a minute. This is EHVT. If you'd like to join us, you have a comment, come on in. This is repeater station kilo kilo seven, November Quebec November, all star note 1622. I think for a lot of people, the big bang, it sort of conjures up this idea of a huge, an extremely huge, an understatement, an extremely huge explosion from a central point that was expanding outwards in all directions. And scientists, they think that the big bang didn't happen at a single location in space. There's a lot of contention now about whether the singularity actually existed or not, even the singularity within a black hole. There's a lot of arguments now whether there's such a thing there. Mathematically, it shouldn't exist because it can't, but that concept's also taken into the realm of the big bang. So, in the case of the big bang, it didn't happen in a single location. It occurred everywhere at once. And I think of all the galaxies in the universe, there's points on the surface of an empty balloon. Sometimes you use a balloon to show by example how everything in the universe can expand faster than the speed of light, but it's not that they're traveling themselves further away, but it's space itself that's dragging them along. So, the same sort of thinking can go in with the universe. So, you think it would be all the galaxies in the universe would point to the surface of an empty balloon. And as the balloon expands, the galaxies all move away from one another, but there's no single point on the surface that the galaxies are expanding away from. Stopping.

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