On page 21 Hartle asserts that at the BB, "the whole of the observable universe today was compressed to the smallest possible volume." He's considered authoritative on General Relativity. I wonder; why do some experts think the universe decreases in volume as we go back in time, but others, such as Penrose (according to Quentin), believe in an always infinite universe where the average distance between galaxies decreases as we back in time? AG
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I think all cosmologist, like Hartle, recognize that the observable universe was much smaller in the past. Which is perfectly compatible with the universe be spacially flat and infinite.
Brent
On Tuesday, February 25, 2025 at 12:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
I think all cosmologist, like Hartle, recognize that the observable universe was much smaller in the past. Which is perfectly compatible with the universe be spacially flat and infinite.
Brent
I fully anticipated that response. But why would the observable universe behave radically different from the entire principle, particularly in light of the Cosmological Principle? AG
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Le mer. 26 févr. 2025, 10:24, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Wednesday, February 26, 2025 at 1:22:21 AM UTC-7 Alan Grayson wrote:On Tuesday, February 25, 2025 at 10:07:41 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:On 2/25/2025 7:59 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:On Tuesday, February 25, 2025 at 6:40:35 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 2/25/2025 3:48 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Tuesday, February 25, 2025 at 12:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:
I think all cosmologist, like Hartle, recognize that the observable universe was much smaller in the past. Which is perfectly compatible with the universe be spacially flat and infinite.
Brent
I fully anticipated that response. But why would the observable universe behave radically different from the entire principle, particularly in light of the Cosmological Principle? AGIt's not radically different. It's different in exactly the way that finite subsets of infinite sets behave.
Brent
But if the observable universe contracts to zero volume, the entire universe has a singularity, which is inherently contradictory. So, the model is, to say the least, inconsistent. AG
It's not contradictory or inconsistent, it's unphysical, i.e. it can't be physically realized; which just means the theory of general relativity doesn't work there. This is not a surprise since GR is not a quantum theory and if you're concerned with a subatomic scale region you'll probably need a quantum theory.
BrentMy conjecture is that there's a fifth force, repulsive in Nature, that prevents the mass of a high mass collapsing star to reach zero volume. AGI don't imagine a quantum theory. More important, I can't grasp the idea of the observable universe contracting to zero or near zero volume as we go backward in time, while the unobservable universe remains infinite in spatial extent. Can you grasp it? Can you explain it? AGAs I've explained already, it's not that the volume goes to zero, but density that goes to infinity, everywhere, there is no valid notion of volume in an infinite universe.Quentin
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AG, your statement "density can't diverge unless volume goes to zero" assumes a finite volume, which doesn’t apply in an infinite universe. In an infinite universe, density can increase indefinitely everywhere without requiring a total volume to shrink.
Brent is correct that the observable universe (the region we can see) shrinks as we go back in time, but that doesn’t mean the entire universe (including the unobservable part) does the same.
The observable universe is just a region within an infinite space, and as we go back in time, the light cone that defines what we can observe gets smaller.If the entire universe is infinite, its total volume remains infinite at all times
—but its density can still increase without bound.
There’s no contradiction.
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AG, the key point is that the observable universe is just a finite portion of an infinite whole. As we go back in time, the observable region contracts because the horizon of what we can see shrinks, but the entire universe remains infinite.Why does the unobservable part remain infinite? Because spatial infinity doesn’t depend on what we can observe. If the universe was infinite at one moment, it stays infinite—shrinking only applies to what is within our causal past, not the entire space.The density increases everywhere, meaning in any finite region—including our observable universe—matter gets packed into a smaller space. But an infinite universe still has no overall “volume”, so it never “shrinks,” only becomes denser.The dichotomy isn’t a contradiction, it’s a consequence of causal horizons—our observable universe is just a window into an infinite cosmos.
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AG, the question isn’t whether I conclude the universe is infinite—it’s whether the cosmological models allow for an infinite universe and what their implications are.We don’t know if the universe is infinite or finite.
On Tuesday, February 25, 2025 at 12:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:>>I think all cosmologist, like Hartle, recognize that the observable universe was much smaller in the past. Which is perfectly compatible with the universe be spacially flat and infinite.
> I fully anticipated that response. But why would the observable universe behave radically different from the entire principle, particularly in light of the Cosmological Principle? AG
On Tue, Feb 25, 2025 at 6:48 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:On Tuesday, February 25, 2025 at 12:46:46 PM UTC-7 Brent Meeker wrote:>>I think all cosmologist, like Hartle, recognize that the observable universe was much smaller in the past. Which is perfectly compatible with the universe be spacially flat and infinite.
> I fully anticipated that response. But why would the observable universe behave radically different from the entire principle, particularly in light of the Cosmological Principle? AGBecause infinite things (like the entire universe)
have fundamentally different properties than finite things (like the observable universe). For example, a proper subset of the infinite set of all the integers (the even integers for example) can be placed in a one to one correspondence with the entire set of integers. You can't do that if the set of integers is finite.
> BTW, the CC
On Wednesday, February 26, 2025 at 4:44:05 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:AG, the question isn’t whether I conclude the universe is infinite—it’s whether the cosmological models allow for an infinite universe and what their implications are.We don’t know if the universe is infinite or finite.OK, but in the post I responded to, you categorically stated that the universe is infinite, and that's on you! AG
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Le mer. 26 févr. 2025, 12:02, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Wednesday, February 26, 2025 at 4:44:05 AM UTC-7 Quentin Anciaux wrote:AG, the question isn’t whether I conclude the universe is infinite—it’s whether the cosmological models allow for an infinite universe and what their implications are.We don’t know if the universe is infinite or finite.OK, but in the post I responded to, you categorically stated that the universe is infinite, and that's on you! AGI did not and never have. You're so entrenched in your own prejudices that you forget to read.
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On Wed, Feb 26, 2025 at 8:08 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:> BTW, the CCIHA.
Brentc
AG, you’re cherry-picking while ignoring the full context. My statement was a conditional explanation, not a categorical claim. Here’s what I actually said:"If the universe was infinite at one moment, it stays infinite—shrinking only applies to what is within our causal past, not the entire space."And earlier:"We don’t know if the universe is infinite or finite. Observations are consistent with both possibilities."I was explaining the logical consequences of an infinite universe—not asserting that the universe is infinite. Your failure to distinguish between an explanation and a claim is your problem, not mine.Quentin
> math isn't physics.
> If the finite observable universe converges to a singularity, we have a hypothetical universe which is not physically possible,
> I am not sure how we can distingush between an infinite and finite universe.
> why do we imagine the hypothetical singularlty indicates the GR fails in this situation?
Yes and yes. If the universe is infinite then the ratio of its size to that of any finite subset is infinite, no matter how large or small the subset is. Imagine the infinite set of the integers. Consider the finite subset {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,...,1e12}. It's size is obviously 1e12. Now shrink the universe by striking every tenth number. Your subset is now {0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,11,...,1e12-1} and it's size is 1e12-1. But the universe is still infinite.
Brentc
I know enough about set theory to have easily generated what you write above. But math isn't physics. If the finite observable universe converges to a singularity, we have a hypothetical universe which is not physically possible, whether finite or infinite. So I am not sure how we can distingush between an infinite and finite universe. Set theory does not help. AG
If we assume an infinite universe and run the clock backward, is it reasonable to conclude that the singularity we imagine forming in the observable region,
is identically the same singularity for the entire universe? Secondly, why do we imagine the hypothetical singularlty indicates the GR fails in this situation? After all, if the expanding universe is determined by measurements, and the average distances between galaxies decreases as the clock runs backward is also determined by measurements, what has this to do with GR, since it's all measurement determined? TY, AG
> the reason GR predicts a singularity is that all forces contribute to mass-energy density and the higher the density the higher the curvature (that's Einstein's equations).
The matter in it becomes more dense. That's the opposite of expansion.So, as we go backward in time, the observable universe seems to converge to a point, while the rate of expansion of the unobservable universe increases since the rate of expansion in earlier times was greater than it is at present? In this scenario, how could the unobservable univese reach an ultra high temperature as we approach the BB? AG
So, as we go backward in time, the observable universe seems to converge to a point, while the rate of expansion of the unobservable universe increases since the rate of expansion in earlier times was greater than it is at present? In this scenario, how could the unobservable univese reach an ultra high temperature as we approach the BB? AG
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On the 26th and in other replies I did say:As I've explained already, it's not that the volume goes to zero, but density that goes to infinity, everywhere, there is no valid notion of volume in an infinite universe.What is difficult to understand?Quentin
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