Nobel laureates say the universe has gone through multiple Big Bangs


When it comes to how the universe begins, science holds that the universe begins as the Big Bang. Many have wondered for years what the end of the universe would be like. The winner of the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics, Sir Roger Penrose, believes that the universe goes through cycles of death and rebirth.

He believes that many Big Bangs have come and more will happen. Penrose points to a black hole because it holds the key to the existence of the previous universe. Sir Roger Penrose is a mathematician and physicist at Oxford University, and he believes that the Big Bang will happen in the future. Penrose received the Nobel Prize for his work on mathematical methods to prove and expand Einstein’s general theory of relativity.

His work on black holes also helped him win prestigious awards which show that objects that become very gait cause the fall of gravity in isolation, which are issues of infinite mass. He believes that the universe will expand until all things are finally decided, and a new Big Bang will bring the new universe into existence.

They call their theory, “traditional cyclical cosmology.” Penrose says he discovered six “hot” sky points known as “Hawking Points”, which were eventually discovered by Professor Stephen Hawking. Hawking believed that black holes would leak radiation and eventually evaporate. According to scientists, evaporation will take longer than the current era of the universe.

Penrose believes that we can make observations called black holes left by the universe of the past. If true, it would validate some of Hawking’s theories. The theory is controversial, and like many theories, it can never be true or false. If that is true, we know that the universe will one day explode, and a new one will come into existence.