Unsatisfied in the case of uniform distribution everywhere. The level of compression has nothing to do with it. The current density of the universe (about 6 protons per cubic meter) is enough to prevent expansion if it was that mass expanding into empty space. None of the material would have sufficient recession speed to exceed the escape velocity of the bounded mass that comprised the occupied part of the universe. — noAxioms
It goes a bit beyond my expertise, but density affects overall gravitational effect to the extent that sufficient density suffices to overcome the effects of dark energy. The gravitational epoch epoch ended some billions of years ago and the expansion reached a minimum. The average density is now low enough that dark energy has the greater effect. The Hubble 'constant' will eventually settle on an actual constant of about 57 km/sec/mpc which corresponds to exponential expansion as opposed to the nearly linear expansion of the last several billion years.I am curious as to how the current density would have any influence on either the physical possibility of expansion, or the degree to which it occurs. In what way then are these two factors correlated, in particular? — Vessuvius
You mean a cyclic model? I'm not familiar with any such model that matches empirical evidence at the level of the accepted FLRW tunings. So I think you can make up any rules you want about what properties are preserved from one bang to the next.Good thought. Add to that, if you would; What does the vision of "multiple" contractions and expansions do if we focus on the velocity of (light in space) during these periods. — Don Wade
I've never heard of a model that posits contraction that doesn't accelerate to some kind of crunch singularity. Doesn't mean such a model doesn't exist, but I've never heard of it.Then the question of; how far does the universe contract before it starts to expand. Lots and lots of questions about the model.
I've never heard of a model that posits contraction that doesn't accelerate to some kind of crunch singularity. Doesn't mean such a model doesn't exist, but I've never heard of it. — noAxioms
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