The radius of the universe was smaller than the Swarzchild radius for that mass.
Why was it expanding, and not collapsing under the curvature of spacetime caused by that much mass-energy in that small a volume?
03-22-2017 10:23 AM
#1
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The radius of the universe was smaller than the Swarzchild radius for that mass. | |
03-22-2017 10:51 AM
#2
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Umm... because it was rotating at an incomprehensible rate, and therefore inertial forces were of the order required to do battle with gravity? That's my best guess. | |
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03-22-2017 11:51 AM
#3
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My only critique is that IF the universe started as an idealized point mass (not even sure how absurd that is), then the notion that it was rotating is absurd. A thing with no measurable length dimension cannot be said to be rotating in any meaningful way. | |