Universes" don't exist as moving objects in a space that can collide like black holes do. Also, black holes don't explode when they collide, they just merger. (Black holes do eventually explode, after an unfathomably long period of time, as their "evaporation" accelerates as they get smaller). — Pfhorrest
The inflationary model (well, the eternal inflation model, which seems to be what's proposed here) is that the natural state of most of the universe ("multiverse") is to be accelerating everything away from everything else ridiculously faster than the speed of light, but then quantum fluctuations can cause a small part of that to decelerate, converting enormous quantities of that dark energy into other forms, filling that little decelerated pocket with energy. Such an event would have been the start of our "universe": we're a little pocket that has temporarily stopped accelerating so much. And now we're on our way back to accelerating apart again, very, very slowly. — Pfhorrest
I looked it up. Some Physicists do believe that its possible for when two black holes collide for them to explode. — christian2017
Stephen Hawkings believes a black hole is like a star that is so dense that the gravitational pull won't let light to escape. — christian2017
Did you read the article? What do you think caused the universe to expand intinitally (initially) or what do you think allowed the big bang? — christian2017
According to the eternal inflation model, which I tentatively accept as the best science we have at the moment, nothing caused the universe to expand initially because there is no initiation, runaway expansion has always been the normal state of the universe going back potentially forever. The big bang was a random temporary slowdown of a small part of it, which became our known universe, which has been slowly accelerating back up ever since and will someday resume that runaway expansion like everything else beyond it. — Pfhorrest
I looked it up. Some Physicists do believe that its possible for when two black holes collide for them to explode.
— christian2017
[citation needed] — Pfhorrest
Stephen Hawkings believes a black hole is like a star that is so dense that the gravitational pull won't let light to escape.
— christian2017
That’s the normal idea of a black hole yeah. — Pfhorrest
Did you read the article? What do you think caused the universe to expand intinitally (initially) or what do you think allowed the big bang?
— christian2017
I didn’t read the article because it sounds like just a pop sci retelling of something I already know.
According to the eternal inflation model, which I tentatively accept as the best science we have at the moment, nothing caused the universe to expand initially because there is no initiation, runaway expansion has always been the normal state of the universe going back potentially forever. The big bang was a random temporary slowdown of a small part of it, which became our known universe, which has been slowly accelerating back up ever since and will someday resume that runaway expansion like everything else beyond it. — Pfhorrest
I think we continue to make the mistake of assuming that ‘prior’ to the Big Bang, everything still needs to be explained in relation to spacetime. We’re talking about potential energy and ‘interacting’ fields of quantum potentiality, after all - none of which need pertain to four-dimensional spacetime in order to exist.
My grasp of the physics in all this is not great, I’ll admit. But it seems to me that most of the issues might be resolved by proposing a fifth-dimensional aspect, which manifests an unfolding, observable universe (including spacetime itself) out of relating field potentialities and/or values regardless of spatial or temporal properties.
We commonly reduce potentiality to four, three, two and even one-dimensional information in order to make use of it, but each time we do that we effectively ignore the relativity of that information to all aspects of reality: we’re assuming at least one aspect relates with a zero, identical or constant value instead of a relative variable. And then we forget to take that into account when we apply the concepts back to reality, because the majority of our interaction occurs below conscious awareness of a fifth dimension. That is, we experience ‘reality’ in time, in space, as shape and at distance, but we think of potential or value as something else entirely.
As far as I can see, the ‘multiverse’ has no spatio-temporal properties. What’s more, space and time have only potentially infinite values... — Possibility
I looked it up. Some Physicists do believe that its possible for when two black holes collide for them to explode.
— christian2017
[citation needed]
Stephen Hawkings believes a black hole is like a star that is so dense that the gravitational pull won't let light to escape.
— christian2017
That’s the normal idea of a black hole yeah.
Did you read the article? What do you think caused the universe to expand intinitally (initially) or what do you think allowed the big bang?
— christian2017
I didn’t read the article because it sounds like just a pop sci retelling of something I already know.
According to the eternal inflation model, which I tentatively accept as the best science we have at the moment, nothing caused the universe to expand initially because there is no initiation, runaway expansion has always been the normal state of the universe going back potentially forever. The big bang was a random temporary slowdown of a small part of it, which became our known universe, which has been slowly accelerating back up ever since and will someday resume that runaway expansion like everything else beyond it. — Pfhorrest
how the universe managed to expand and break free from gravity in the "beginning"? — christian2017
how the universe managed to expand and break free from gravity in the "beginning"?
— christian2017
From the perspective of a high school physics 20 years old and odd bits of physics knowledge, this is an insightful remark. The gravity of even supermassive black holes probably pale in comparison to the Big Bang singularity and yet matter managed to escape the latter; quite spectacularly I must say. If even light can't escape a run of the mill black hole it would imply that when the Big Bang occured, matter would've achieved superluminal velocities to overcome the "infinite" gravity therein active.
I guess there's a perfectly good and singularly boring explanation for this.
If you will allow me a guess, it isn't the case that matter actually flew/is flying apart from the Big Bang singularity like a shrapnel when a grenade explodes. What actually happened and is happening is space is expanding. That way we could have the Big Bang without violating the Einsteinian speed limit. We're still inside the singularity. :scream: That means the structure of this universe is actually that of a singularity :scream: — TheMadFool
I've heard this sort of thing before. I only half way understand the concept. Considering i only half way understand the concept, i can't say you are wrong. There are too many variables for me to claim you are wrong or right. This is on top of the fact that i'm not all that great at math. — christian2017
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