A: Yes. Quantum fluctuations during inflation were stretched to macroscopic sizes, becoming the slight density variations seen in the CMB, which later grew into galaxies. Section 3: Dark Matter & Dark Energy Q6: What is dark matter? A: An unknown, non-luminous matter that interacts via gravity but not electromagnetically. It makes up ~27% of the universe and holds galaxies together.
A: Currently unknown and possibly unknowable. General Relativity breaks down at the singularity. Some theories suggest a quantum vacuum, a previous contracting universe (Big Bounce), or that time itself began with the Big Bang.
A: Unlikely unless dark energy changes sign or decays. In some modified gravity models, a "Big Bounce" could occur.
A: By 400 million years after the Big Bang, the first dwarf galaxies had formed. The Milky Way began merging with smaller galaxies around 1–2 billion years after the Big Bang. Section 6: The Fate of the Universe Q12: How will the universe end? A: Based on current data (flat universe, dark energy constant), the most likely fate is Heat Death (Big Freeze): galaxies drift apart, stars burn out, black holes evaporate, and the universe approaches absolute zero temperature.