Whoah, you are a cranky one. But really, your posts on cosmology are a garbled mess. And being polite to you was clearly wasted breath. — apokrisis
You are talking rubbish and I am probably one of the few people here who can see straight through you. How can a question that you are not answering be a garbled mess? This is the third time I am going to ask you:
What is this "humongously" large you are speaking of? What are you comparing it to, exactly?
You don't know, do you. — TimeLine
Depending on the mass density, it could force omega > 1 and would therefore make the universe a closed system like a sphere or reduce omega < 1 and therefore the curvature would open and this is problematic viz., euclidean geometry. Flatness problem is when the geometry is a 1 exactly and perfectly between the two. — TimeLine
You are talking rubbish and I am probably one of the few people here who can see straight through you. — TimeLine
This is the third time I am going to ask you:
What is this "humongously" large you are speaking of? What are you comparing it to, exactly? — TimeLine
The idea in inflationary terms is that the total energy at the beginning was 0 where the negative contribution to the energy of the cosmic gravitational field - as in gravitational repulsion where the energy density produces these gravitational fields - cancels the energy of matter or the positive energy. Inflation thus becomes eternal because as mentioned earlier the matter is being created by the inflation but controlled by the non-uniformity. — TimeLine
If inflation is pushing omega to 1 with omega being the mass density divided by critical mass density, it means a universe with 0 matter density and critical mass density in the cosmological constant; the expansion of the universe is accelerating and the vacuum energy of this empty space has a mass density (which would mean that it is not actually empty). So Omega is relevant. — TimeLine
Clicking on the graph shows that (nearly) all universes start at the Einstein-de Sitter point with Omega(m) = 1 and Omega(Lambda)=0. This is because if there is a Big Bang (R goes to zero) the density, hence H, hence the critical density, all tend to infinity at R = 0. So Omega(Lambda) tends to zero, while the matter density tends to the critical density.
I'm taking Apokrisis' side, this isn't relevant to the comment you replied to, and not least because it doesn't contain a thesis of any sort. — BlueBanana
And the original inflation story - not the one Linde is pushing that is the subject of the OP - speculated the extent of the scalar field would double every 10^-37 seconds or so. That was its exponential rate of growth. So presuming the decay of the grand unified field into the strong and electroweak fields happened at 10^-35 seconds after the birth of the universe, thus triggering the onset of inflation, followed by the further decay of the inflaton field by about 10^-32 second, then you could easily get 50 to 60 doublings into that fractional period.
So old school inflation says the visible universe is just 10^-55ish of the whole shebang. Hence the whole is "humongously larger", but not infinite, to use the technical description for that cosmic scenario. — apokrisis
You see how right from the beginning you were mangling the science. The free lunch story is that the kinetic mass of the universe nicely balances its gravitational potential. So the energy to drive expansion is matched by the energy wanting to re-collapse that expansion. However, gravity is held in suspension until the electroweak symmetry breaking releases a flood of gravitating particles via the Higgs mechanism. It is only then that the potential is actualised and collapse becomes a real issue. Mass can start to clump and unbalance the expansion. — apokrisis
Inflation doesn't push omega anywhere. It washes out the early fluctuations that would have destabilised the show. So the problem is that overall, on average, the Big Bang could have had a perfect flat balance of omega = 1, but quantum fluctuations would have made it grainy. So it would have been unstable due to inhomogeneity. You need inflation just to deal with that separate problem.
Your own citation says this - carefully distinguishing between omega(m) and omega(lambda), or the critical density of the mass contents and the critical density of the dark energy: — apokrisis
It is all well and good that observable fluctuations and perturbations in scalar fields in the CMB radiation can explain the isotropy and homogeneity along with the massive size, as well as the expansion of the universe as accelerating, — TimeLine
You stated that the initial region that "banged" was already massive. Going back 13 to 14 billion years, this makes no sense. If the universe was large and infinitely dense, you are merely comparing the size or shape to the observable universe. — TimeLine
Going back 13 to 14 billion years, this makes no sense. If the universe was large and infinitely dense, you are merely comparing the size or shape to the observable universe. — TimeLine
As I have already said, I appreciate Guth' suggestion that the early conditions were about the size of 10^-28cm - the size of a marble - and with energy at 10^16 GeV the scalar field in this false vacuum state dominates the total mass-energy density enabling the volume to expand at a constant; the negative pressure enables it to grow exponentially and no energy is actually needed, or at least the energy of empty space (dark energy) and something we still have no clue as to what it is. In a fraction of a moment, the universe expanded at the speed of light, actually probably faster than light because there are no limitations to how far the universe can expand according to GR. Then the repulsive gravity begins to decay at 10^-33 seconds after the big bang and we get what we have now in the observable universe. — TimeLine
I get that inflation is the physics of matter and scalar fields and that the particles that make universe from initial conditions to the big bang is in the Higgs fields, but these separate suggestions are intentionally fused to help ascertain a number of other factors that have - like the flatness problem - but also have not yet been raised in this discussion; as mentioned earlier, the second law of thermodynamics and the arrow of time, the low-entropy early conditions, cosmological parameters and these problems in inflation also need to be considered, hence the fusion and I believe that I have already made it clear that I appreciate Guth. — TimeLine
From my understanding, it does; when you consider the effect of the cosmological constant as it explains the rate of expansion with time, particles that make up the universe following inflation are merely the quantum explanation of a Non-Zero Higgs field that forms elementary particle masses; it has positive and negative contributions at a constant at every space time point, which would mean that omega would equal to omega(m) + omega (lambda) as it explains the rate of expansion with time. I get what you mean, but there is no distinction. — TimeLine
It is the fluctuations of the CMB we observe. Any scalar field responsible for inflation is then imputed via theory. — apokrisis
And it is the isotropy of the CMB we observe, thus making homogeneity a reasonable belief. And likewise, the massive size (much bigger than just the visible universe) a reasonable belief. — apokrisis
...explain the isotropy and homogeneity along with the massive size — TimeLine
If you could write proper sentences, then it would be clear what you think should be compared to what. — apokrisis
Here, read. — TimeLine
In particular, assuming inflation [1] as a solution to the horizon, flatness, and other cosmological problems and as a seed for density fluctuations for later structure formation, we are obliged to adopt scenarios where the baryon asymmetry is generated after the reheating.
Now, I could turn around and say something like just because you go over the heads of others, doesn't mean you know what you are talking about or screaming like a little baby boy doesn't actually suddenly make you right but I am going to ask you once and once only, speak and question properly. If you do not understand something, it is you that has the problem and because you know a bit of physics, your attitude is nevertheless ungenerous. — TimeLine
Why do you repeat what I say and then scream that you don't understand? — TimeLine
So the isotropic state of the CMB was a puzzling observation. Guth proposed a scalar field with a special property - some kind of repulsive spacetime expanding phase before it decays - as the possible solution. — apokrisis
Remember that you decided to focus on my use of the term "humongously large". You were asking relative to what? I answered several times. Obviously the comparison was between the size of the visible universe at the end of inflation compared to the inflated whole. — apokrisis
Indeed, and you went on a torrent of abuse because I sought an explanation, and an explanation you still have not given. — TimeLine
The problem is not that, Apokrisis, the problem is that you are intentionally and incorrectly misunderstanding my comments and then responding to an article I have given you by implying I meant something that I did not mean. — TimeLine
'm not. I am interested in what you have to say, but your behaviour and your responses have only made me lose my respect for you completely and I am confident that the reasoning behind that behaviour is because you are uncomfortable with my presence. — TimeLine
I’ve given you an explanation several times now. So you will have to explain what your problem with it is. — apokrisis
Obviously the comparison was between the size of the visible universe at the end of inflation compared to the inflated whole. — apokrisis
So old school inflation says the visible universe is just 10^-55ish of the whole shebang. Hence the whole is "humongously larger", but not infinite, to use the technical description for that cosmic scenario. — apokrisis
How does that explain the problem? The "bang" of the big bang? — TimeLine
As I said, it is you that has no clue what he is talking about. — TimeLine
As this thread demonstrates, all of modern cosmology is a myth in which enumerable mystical forces are being invented and named as needed which is directly analogous to the way ancient way myths and gods were invented to explain things. None of modern cosmology makes any sense other than to keep some priests busy.
The whole scientific cosmology needs to discarded. It is fundamentally flawed because it was constructed with the sole purpose of proving a pre-ordained goal, i.e. that the Universe can come into being without resorting to anything but particles, which as it happens, no longer exist in physics. Hence a mess of construction and deconstruction, similar to modern culinary fads. — Rich
Do you have any conception of what violence is? Or are you talking about philosophical violence? The type that one uses so as to allow their cherished beliefs left to propagate unchallenged? — Rich
It has been my understanding that this particular version of the multiverse is unverifiable, thus meaningless. — T Clark
None of modern cosmology makes any sense other than to keep some priests busy. — Rich
I don't want to restart the battle, but I'd like to know how much of what you've discussed is at least theoretically verifiable either through direct observation or extrapolation from what we can observe. In particular, the existence of other universes within the possibly infinite universe. It has been my understanding that this particular version of the multiverse is unverifiable, thus meaningless. — T Clark
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