From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Beyond the standard Big Bang model there may be a more accurate approximation (or generalization) than that of the standard model. Observational cosmologists consider the standard Big Bang model to be a good approximation to the Universe,
- in spatial extent from the Earth outwards towards the observational sphere
- and in time backwards from the present towards some limiting "time=zero"
Similarly, it may be possible to deduce what happened "before the big bang" by looking at indirect evidence. Speculations about what happened before the big bang usually involve quantum gravity.
- Plasma cosmology
- the quasi Steady State model
- chaotic inflation
- brane models
- models including the Hartle-Hawking boundary condition in which the whole of space-time is finite
- ekpyrotic scenarios of an eternally bouncing (big banging) universe

