Space is the place

Out of context: Reply #464

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  • _niko0

    can anyone answer this for me:

    if the our universe started from a single infinitely small point and is now expanding outward at accelerating speeds, does that mean that the centre of our universe is hollow? Like we're at the edge of a bubble that's been expanding for 13 billion years.

    If not, if it's more uniform throughout, does that mean that there is something at the centre continuously creating or ejecting matter? like a reverse black hole?

    • Same thing with climate change, why give a shit, the sun is explanding and will literally consume the earth in a mere 12.5b years.shapesalad
    • to your comment, what if universes expanding from a single point is just one scale and beyond that are millions and billions of universes in a endless expanse.shapesalad
    • and yes, black holes within that, swallowing up universes and spitting them out.shapesalad
    • the universe is infinite like time, thus it no center to grow from, but instead grows from its edges like a wildfire that started many billions of years ago.PioneerDJ303
    • yeah I'm not sure but when we say universe do we mean our observable universe and everything beyond is the multiverse?
      it would help to separate the two I thin
      _niko
    • so our observable universe must of had a finite start from the Big Bang and expanded outward as we're observing not to do_niko
    • The universe does not "grow from its edges". All the matter that exists now existed back then, just more compressed.cannonball1978

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