Black Holes, the Big Bang and the Habitable Universe: Are They Really Compatible?

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DOI: 10.4236/jmp.2018.91005    1,002 Downloads   2,095 Views  Citations
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ABSTRACT

Astronomical observations have confirmed the existence of BHs and the occurrence of the Big Bang event to beyond any reasonable doubt. While quantum field theory and general theory of relativity predict the mass-spectrum of BHs to be unlimited, both theories agree that their creation is irreversible. In this article, I argue that the recently-proposed SuSu-objects (objects that are made of incompressible superconducting gluon-quark superfluids) may not only entail the required properties to be excellent BH-candidates, but also encode a hidden connection to dark matter and dark energy in cosmology. If such connection indeed exists, then the inevitable consequence would be that our universe is infinite and subject to repeated Big Bang events of the second kind, which makes the habitability of the universe certain and our cosmic relevance insignificant and meaningless.

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Hujeirat, A. (2018) Black Holes, the Big Bang and the Habitable Universe: Are They Really Compatible?. Journal of Modern Physics, 9, 70-83. doi: 10.4236/jmp.2018.91005.

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