Why the Universe Didn't Become a Black Hole
StartsWithABang writes: With some 10^90 particles in the observable Universe, even stretched across 92 billion light-years today, the Universe is precariously close to recollapsing. How, then, is it possible that back in the early stages after the Big Bang, when all this matter-and-energy was concentrated within a region of space no bigger than our current Solar System, the Universe didn't collapse down to a black hole? Not only do we have the explanation, but we learn that even if the Universe did recollapse, we wouldn't get a black hole at all!
I mean the universe collapses in the beginning ... then it is a 'black hole' ...
But you can only see form the outside that there is a black hole! As there is mo outside of the universe you can not observe it, hence you don't notice the black hole, hence it is not there.
QED
Oh! That was simple!
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
You can't use the Schwarzschild radius calculation for expanding space. The only kind of new part was the bit about not becoming a black hole if it should re-collapse.
Don't waste your vote! Vote for whoever you want, unless you live in a swing state it won't matter anyways
So does ./ have some kind of promotional relationship with startswithabang? If so you should disclose it.
The blog does have interesting material, and its appropriate for /., so its not like its bad that every article on there is making the /. front page. But its kind of odd that every article on there is making the ./ front page.
@de_machina
From TFA, "As it turns out, we live almost in the Goldilocks case, with just a tiny bit of dark energy thrown in the mix ... What’s remarkable is that the amount of fine-tuning that needed to occur so that the Universe’s expansion rate and matter-and-energy density matched so well so that we didn’t either recollapse immediately or fail to form."
Even if not religion in disguise, you can call it religion in searching at least. From Acts 17:27, "God did this so that they would seek him and perhaps reach out for him and find him, though he is not far from any one of us."
I once had a signature.
So to extrapolate from the TFA: The laws of physics do not exist in a vacuum...
Someone give this guy an xkcd award, then punch him in the face.
Hadn't they proved (mathematically) that just after the big bang there was a time (inflation) when it was expanding faster than light. If you are going faster than light then you can escape from a black hole.
In related news, ants develop a religion around the question of why they have not been stepped on by an elephant.
Have gnu, will travel.
If at some point in the past the mass of the universe was in a volume wholly contained within its own Schwarzschild radius, why did the universe not become (or, more accurately, remain) a black hole?
"...Schwarzschild’s solution is a static one, meaning that the metric of space does not evolve as time progresses. But there are plenty of other solutions—de Sitter space, for one, and the Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker metric, for another—that describe spacetimes that either expand or contract."
Literally everything else in the article was off-topic, and I can't help but feel this highly evasive 'answer' might have been "Ask Ethan" admitting he just didn't know.
Which is a pity because it is a fascinating question.
Sure, in an imaginary world where the graceful and faithful elephant works freakishly hard to make the ants live happy lives even though the ants are so tiny to imagine what this great elephant looks like or means to them. The ants who hate the elephant drown themselves in puddles of water, and we the outsider look at these drowning ants in this imaginary world and think "these ungratefully stupid ants deserve to be eliminated by natural selection." And the elephant looks at us and say "if we can save one more ant from drowning, then why don't we?"
I once had a signature.
Sorry this article fails to explain the issue. We don't really understand dark matter and dark energy, yet its being used to explain away the mass/gravitation paradox. You might as well declare it was caused by black magic.
Before the theory of dark energy, they used to believe inflation occurs when after the big bang, the universe expand thousands of times the speed of light so that the the gravitation escape velocity was much slower than the speed of light. This is all hogwash. The issue is that the evidence no longer supports that the universe started with the big bang and they are grasping at straws, to keep an old, outdated theory alive.
FWIW: I don't have the answer, but I know this is another wrong answer. However, I am optimistic that people are now at least acknowledging the paradox and thinking about it. Perhaps some one seriously working on the issue will figure it out. So solve a complex problem one needs to start asking the right questions.
"With some 10^90 particles in the observable Universe, even stretched across 92 billion light-years today"
FYI: The universe is much larger, The observable Universe is only what our current technology can see. I believe when the James Webb Telescope becomes operational the "observable" universe will get much larger and older. There is no way the Universe is only 15 to 16 Billion years old. Its way to complex and organized to be that young. We always make assumption based upon the limits of our technology. Over the past 200 years the age of the earth was recalculated dozens of times from 6,000 years to 4.5 Billion years. They still don't got it right. 4.5 Billion years ago is when Earth collided with Theia. Scientist use Meteors to check the age of the earth/solar system, forgetting that most of the rocks in the solar system are leftovers from the Earth-Theia collision. So they are dating the same event. Yet no one has put the connection together yet. I am convinced that Cosmologist have greatly under estimated the age of the universe.
http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2014/06/05/moon-origin-collision-earth-theta/10023819/
today i learned the universe only has 10^90 particles , same as the richest man on earth if he traded his cash for zimbabwe dongs.
Wasn't there some conjecture some time ago that entropy decreased inside a black hole, and that our universe corresponded to a time-reversed version of a star collapsing into a black hole? Which of course would be interesting because the "arrow of time" would point two opposite ways in the "meta-universe".
If Pandora's box is destined to be opened, *I* want to be the one to open it.
Stop posting links to medium.com... the worst Science site I've ever seen short of timecube... wait, actually timecubes at least entertaining.
All of their articles boil down to:
Subject "Could *insert some inane scifi topic* really be??"
10 pages of images scraped from geocities homepages, font type and spacing worthy of a freshman English paper and then...
No, not really, but thanks for reading!
You want real science news? Here you go: http://phys.org/physics-news/
Isn't this a better story for a science fiction book? Not only dose it not matter to anyone, but thinking logically you can't determine if it could be true or not. Can't take anything you read as truth unless it can be verified, which this can not.
"Universe is precariously close to recollapsing" Someone wants to get a job at news organizations, News sites love scary headlines to catch gullible readers attention
Can't you folks see it is just religion disguised as science, how it implies a divine hand?
No, you're thinking about the Divine Monkeyspank hypothesis, which is indeed religion, but not disguised as science.
p.s. - Your troll score is: 0
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
...then how about this one?
One mystery which has not been solved as of 2009 is the absence of red dwarfs with no metals. (In astronomy, a metal is any element heavier than hydrogen or helium.) The Big Bang model predicts the first generation of stars should have only hydrogen, helium, and trace amounts of lithium. If such stars included red dwarfs, they should still be observable today, but none have yet been identified. The preferred explanation is that without heavy elements only large and not yet observed population III stars can form, and these rapidly burn out, leaving heavy elements which then allow for the formation of red dwarfs. Alternative explanations, such as the idea that zero-metal red dwarfs are dim and could be few in number, are considered much less likely as they seem to conflict with stellar evolution models.
The universe is a black hole.
God is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't became a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang
I can stated with equal evidence and authority that the stray cat I almost ran over yesterday is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't become a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang.
Be glad I missed him.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
Because God doesn't want it to.
Last I checked, the universe was thought to be 13-14 billion years old. That would mean that the furthest across the observable universe could be at this time is 26-28 billion light years and that is if we were at the center of the universe, which we are not.
I don't buy 92 billion light years.
No point splitting hairs over what qualifies as "religion," but if this is the case, then there's more evidence for the Big Bang than for any other religion ever devised in the history of humanity, and that's saying something.
God is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't became a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang
I can stated with equal evidence and authority that the stray cat I almost ran over yesterday is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't become a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang.
Be glad I missed him.
Ok, let's hear it.
I just learned on Facebook that cats have a religion, and it is 'catolisch' ... to understand this you need to be german or have a similar language like dutch or perhaps a scandinavian one ... but its funny!
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
God is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't became a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang
I can stated with equal evidence and authority that the stray cat I almost ran over yesterday is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't become a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang.
Be glad I missed him.
Ok, let's hear it.
[clears throat] "the stray cat I almost ran over yesterday is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't become a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang."
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
God is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't became a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang
I can stated with equal evidence and authority that the stray cat I almost ran over yesterday is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't become a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang.
Be glad I missed him.
Ok, let's hear it.
[clears throat] "the stray cat I almost ran over yesterday is the fundamental reason for why the universe didn't become a black hole in the early stages after the Big Bang."
Was your life changed by this incident?
No, my life would have been changed (i.e., ended in the cosmic collapse) if I *had* hit him.
Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
No point splitting hairs over what qualifies as "religion," but if this is the case, then there's more evidence for the Big Bang than for any other religion ever devised in the history of humanity, and that's saying something.
The evidence (which is nothing new, BTW) is amazing though. If the density of the universe were too low, or too high, we wouldn't have a universe to live in today. OK, that's not too odd - big crunch one way, big rip the other. What's astonishing is that the required density in the 1 ns universe to allow our universe to reach its current age must be correct to 24 significant digits.
Talk about fine tuning! One part in 10^24 higher or lower, and no universe today. That's about as anti-Copernican as you can get. Either we accept the "hand of god" in tuning the universe so precisely, or (far stupider IMO), we believe some silly anthropomorphic principle, or we simply accept that the physics is incomplete.
The last choice is of course where most working cosmologists are. There must be something we don't understand that explains why the early universe was necessarily so fine tuned - that it wasn't a happy accident, but could only be that way, or was very likely to be that way. Work on "inflationary" theories is a big part of the field these days, and this question is central to them.
There are a bunch of hypotheses that say, effectively, "the effect driving the early, very rapid inflation of the universe stopped, by it's very nature, at the point where the universe was exactly 'flat'". The dark energy seen driving expansion today is then explained as a different effect, incredibly weak by comparison.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
...and Spock's excellent timing.
Where do I mail my Thank You gift to?
Table-ized A.I.
I think we can use the English equivalent: Cat-holic :)
Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
Either we accept the "hand of god" in tuning the universe so precisely, or (far stupider IMO), we believe some silly anthropomorphic principle, or we simply accept that the physics is incomplete.
While I agree the last explanation is probably the most likely one (a dampening effect that occurs at a certain point could be a plausible explanation), don't discount nr. 2: we just don't know (and we cannot know) how many universes are generated at any given point in time. Perhaps quantum fluctuations generate 1 billion "universe seeds" per cubic centimeter at any given second, and since they are random, most don't lead to another universe. Some do, and the ones that are "exactly right" give rise to universes like ours. Should we ever find a way to measure these things (not in the next decades, I think), we might find that option 2 is actually the real one. But I agree that option 3 is the most likely one.
Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
From TFA, "As it turns out, we live almost in the Goldilocks case, with just a tiny bit of dark energy thrown in the mix ...
Umm...70+% of the universe is "just a tiny bit"?
No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
"Cat-holic" sounds like it'd mean someone addicted to cats the way an alcoholic is addicted to alcohol, possibly as a side effect of toxoplasmosis.
Except, of course, for the fact you can't, and you know this with absolute clarity in your own mind at the very moment you are typing your lie.
In case you're feeling a bit dense today, I believe the author meant tiny bit by volume, not mass, since the expansion of the Universe concerns volume.
You are very welcome.
I once had a signature.
I think we can use the English equivalent: Cat-holic :)
WTF? Everyone knows they're cat-licks. Geez Louise!
There's nothing wrong with the anthropic principle, it just can't be used as the explanation of what is happening. It is not a physical theory.
It simply states that, "the existence of the human inhabitable universe proves only that the existence of such a universe must be possible, because we are here to observe it." It's almost tautological.
It doesn't prove nor disprove deities, or the scientific method, or any theories derived therein. It is only useful for logically refuting the unproven assumption that our existence ipso facto assumes that the universe was designed specifically for us.
That said, it does not disprove the intelligent design theory either, it just points out that there do exist other explanations for the facts. So yeah, it's a valid point to make, but we still might be living in a big terrarium.
Who died and made Siegel god?
A change to the density of the universe is likely what triggered a phase change in space-time to bring us to a now-accelerating expansion of the universe. Movement of the mass of that cat away from a storage facility with a number of tons of heavy metals could well have prevented the density figure in this part of the universe from reaching a critical point which causes another phase change.
Of course, the problem with that is that the change would then have happened about an hour later when came over to inspect a recent shipment, but hey, even the standard model has currently stated limits, right?
Seriously, let's get over the religion vs. science twaddle. The existence of a universe with an omniscient, omnipotent Creator who doesn't want to be seen by us is identical to a universe that has no Creator. For whatever reason, that Creator, should they exist, wants you to take it on faith. So let's stop trying to disprove the deities, when we can't do so, and let's stop trying to prove the deities, when they clearly don't want you to be able to. Thanks.
Serial self-aggrandizing one-trick-pony spammer? Check. Obvious headline? Check. Breezy "summary" with no content? Check. Useless link target? Check.
Well, no need to read it. But why do the editors let this incessant tripe go through?
There's a quite important principle in science, generalized from the Copernican principle, that theories that require a lot of "fine tuning" of constants in order to work are bad. The big problem with the anthropic principle is that it's too often used as an excuse to ignore the glaring weaknesses in some areas of science. We shouldn't be comfortable with such things (and for the most part, of course, scientists aren't). It's not that the anthropic principle is some overt fallacy, but it really makes me cringe to see once-respected figures like Tipler taking it seriously. It bothers me a lot less to see a religious figure suggest similar ideas - at least that guy is sticking to his principles.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
Sure, in an imaginary world where the graceful and faithful elephant works freakishly hard to make the ants live happy lives even though the ants are so tiny to imagine what this great elephant looks like or means to them. The ants who hate the elephant drown themselves in puddles of water, and we the outsider look at these drowning ants in this imaginary world and think "these ungratefully stupid ants deserve to be eliminated by natural selection." And the elephant looks at us and say "if we can save one more ant from drowning, then why don't we?"
Well, that is a good question. What can't we? Also another good question is: How do we know we aren't already inside a black hole? No one has ever been to one or seen its inside so all we have is good guesses.
Because I'm not. But, where does the 92 billion light year thing come from? I would think what, 28 billion across if it's 14 billion years old?
Black holes cannot hold Chuck Norris they tried once and the big bang was the end result.
In case you're feeling a bit dense today, I believe the author meant tiny bit by volume, not mass, since the expansion of the Universe concerns volume.
You are very welcome.
Not feeling particularly dense at the moment, but thanks for asking! Your point did get to me read TFA, though.
Since IANAP, perhaps I'm a bit confused, but as I understand it, dark energy "can have such a profound effect on the universe, making up 68% of universal density, only because it uniformly fills otherwise empty space."
What is more, volume "is the quantity of three-dimensional space enclosed by some closed boundary, for example, the space that a substance (solid, liquid, gas, or plasma) or shape occupies or contains."
So I'm left with something of a quandary. If the two statements above are correct, that dark energy is 68% (more by other estimates) of the universe by density, and "uniformly fills otherwise empty space," and volume "is the quantity of three-dimensional space enclosed by some closed boundary, for example, the space that a ... shape occupies" that brings us to the question, how much "otherwise empty space" there is in the universe? Quite a bit as I understand it. Much, much more than non-empty space, AFAIK.
Since I am (apparently) much denser than dark energy, perhaps you could explain how it is that, by mass, dark energy is ~68% of the universe and is uniformly spread across otherwise empty space (the vast majority of the *volume* of the universe), anyone could consider that to be a "tiny bit?"
It's entirely possible that I'm missing something obvious. If so, there's definitely a "whoosh!" going on over here. I suppose it's possible that there was much less dark energy (if it's an inherent property of space-time, that could explain it) at and shortly after the big bang than there is now, which I guess could, for some values of "much less" be "a tiny bit."
However, (and again, I am not a cosmologist) we don't really understand "dark energy" except for its effect increasing the speed of the expansion of the universe, so I'm not sure how anyone could make such a statement with a high confidence.
Please, feel free to school me.
No, no, you're not thinking; you're just being logical. --Niels Bohr
Yes you can use the Schwarzschild argument. Expanding space is only a handwaving rationalization, a coordinate-dependent way of thinking that is not compatible with the principle of general covariance.
If the gravitational source density was ever more than zero, then it follows that the contents of the universe were less massive in the past. In an inertial set of coordinates, not the screwy Freidmann coordinates, it can be understood that the shards of the Big Bang, flying apart at next to lightspeed, still add mass to the universe today, but at a diluted density.
Michael J. Burns
Perhaps the answer doesn't lie in the 3rd dimension.
One of the possible consequences of the curvature of 4th-dimensional space-time is that our universe may be a 3-dimensional surface of a 4th-dimensional hypersphere. And if the 4-dimensional universe is expanding, the 3-dimensional universe would expand too.
This model of the universe was also used in a famous sci-fi novel.
"Once we've identified and embraced our sickness, we'll have strength...and that's when we get dangerous." - John Waters
TFA proposes a kinda-stable universe if it contains an exact amount of stuff, not one neutrino more or less. My question is: "If the universe has net angular momentum, can't it be stable for a large range of stuff?" much like a solar system?
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
It's kind of useless arguing with me since I shouldn't be putting words in the mouth of Ethan Siegel, and arguing on whether it is appropriate to call dark matter tiny really has no bearing on what I'm telling you about God and the Universe. But just in case you find it a pleasure to discuss these fine points with me, the very notion of mass distributed over volume involves statistics, and as you know, you can make statistics tell any story.
Consider this figure that I just randomly found so I don't have to draw one myself. You can see that the two clouds of green dots span about the same space. But the cloud on the right is more concentrated than the cloud on the left. You can imagine a third figure where there are several clumps of dots and still has the same overall space and density. Do you count the space between the dots as occupancy? Do you impose some form of density threshold to eliminate spaces that are simply too sparse? Not to mention that an atom consisting of a dense nucleus and a cloud of electrons is really more than 99.999% of space.
I'm not saying your Wikipedia references are wrong; they want to paint a picture illustrating the pervasiveness of dark matter, but Ethan Siegel is also entitled to say the amount is tiny. Tininess is really in the eyes of the beholder.
I once had a signature.
> the Universe is precariously close to recollapsing. Hah what?
It's just as improbable that 1 = 1 as it is that the universe is correct to 24 decimal places. If it wasn't, 1 would not equal 1, and vice versa.
And we are inside of its event horizon. Anything that might exist beyond it, if the laws of physics are the same as they are here (which they may not be), would not be able to see anything that happens inside. Similarly, we cannot see outside of it because every straight line (how light travels) in our space does not go beyond its event horizon, just like in a black hole.
File under 'M' for 'Manic ranting'
I'm all for "physics is incomplete." Saying it must be God because we can't explain it is just as good as no explanation. "Fine tuning" doesn't tell you HOW, it only tells you WHO.
In Italian: Gattolico
Maybe the cosmonaut was supposed to be a troll within a troll, but it's supposed to be confidant.(sp?)
Judy Tenuta, of course, has her own religion, Judyism.
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
Reminds me of the old saying "Existence is pain. It is better not to exist at all. But how many people are that lucky? Maybe one in a hundred."
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
I firmly believe that this "startswithabang" moron PAYS for all of these "stories" on Slashdot.
I've read some of what he's written and he's an idiot. Doesn't know shit about astronomy.
> Talk about fine tuning!
Talk about God of the Gaps!
Hehe, funny :D
Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
You don't have equal evidence nor is that equal logic since your cat exists in the universe after the Big Bang. But you already knew that.
this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
One part in 10^24 is why having a Creator makes a difference. One part in 10^24 is no accident. And some people still don't what to admit what created the Big Bang but there is no other answer. How much faith does it take to believe all this was an accident?
What about the "some 92 billion light-years worth of space contained in a volume of space no bigger than our own Solar System"? That was a miracle. Accidents don't "give rise to all the wondrous diversity of nuclear, atomic, molecular, cellular, geologic, planetary, stellar, galactic and clustering phenomena we have today."
this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
I wonder why nobody pointed out the real possibility of our 3D universe being inside a black hole.
I could even imagine temporal displacement causing us to see the bigbang as a instant event, while on the outside its just near ethernity.
I've often wondered about this, only to end up with the question how many black holes deep we are..
Hivemind harvest in progress..