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Does Space Disappear In The Big Crunch?
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If the Universe ends with a Big Crunch is "empty" space left behind or does it disappear. In fact, does space every disappear e.g. near a black hole?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have real difficulty with this
I can understand easily a balloon being blown up in 3D space
but the equations involved show that in the expanding universe, this is not the case - this is cosmology and not balloon-blowing ! - and space itself is expanding or contracting
yeah OK that's why they study it at uni ....
I can understand easily a balloon being blown up in 3D space
but the equations involved show that in the expanding universe, this is not the case - this is cosmology and not balloon-blowing ! - and space itself is expanding or contracting
yeah OK that's why they study it at uni ....
It is looking increasing unlikely that this universe will "end" in a "big crunch". If anything the thinning out is accelerating.
But were it to do so, physics as we know it breaks down at around the singularity, so there is a certain amount of speculation possible; but since space and matter seems to come as a set, the universe shrinking to zero is as good a definition of space = 0 as one can get.
I'm unsure of your e.g. though. Existing black holes have space, you can measure small and large ones. There's supposed to be a massive one at the centre of the Milky Way.
But were it to do so, physics as we know it breaks down at around the singularity, so there is a certain amount of speculation possible; but since space and matter seems to come as a set, the universe shrinking to zero is as good a definition of space = 0 as one can get.
I'm unsure of your e.g. though. Existing black holes have space, you can measure small and large ones. There's supposed to be a massive one at the centre of the Milky Way.
Ah -- can't refute the science? Then just make it sound all about the money.
P.S. My work is based on CERN physics. I can assure you it isn't ***. But then I would say that, because I get a massive amount of not all that much money for it... ?
I don't even get the arguments against, which seem entirely motivated (if memory serves) by the idea that Newton was right about everything. This seems pretty remarkable, since Newton himself was literally the first person to point out that he wasn't right about everything.
P.S. My work is based on CERN physics. I can assure you it isn't ***. But then I would say that, because I get a massive amount of not all that much money for it... ?
I don't even get the arguments against, which seem entirely motivated (if memory serves) by the idea that Newton was right about everything. This seems pretty remarkable, since Newton himself was literally the first person to point out that he wasn't right about everything.
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