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Do we live inside a black hole?

If all the matter in the universe was once in a singularity which expanded with the Big Bang to the size it is now, then surely the density of matter initially exceeded the threshhold to create a black hole.

If such is the case, then don't we all live within one massive black hole and the physics that we see are the physics that operate within a black hole?

And if there are smaller blackholes within our observable universe, then surely it is reasonable to assume that there is physics that operates within those blackholes that is similar to our own.

This leads me to think of 2 pretty cool outcomes.

1) there can be an infinite number of blackholes within blackholes and that our observable universe exists as a just one blackhole in a universe of a larger scale just as we have many black holes within our observable universe.  Kind of like infitie Russian Dolls.

and

2) it is possible that the observable universe can both expand to reach the scale and density equilibrium required to one day equalize with the space it occupies in the next higher up scale universe.  Balance could be achieved through the mechanism of matter falling into the Black Hole and hawking radiation out of it along with the gradual expansion.

Does it also mean that the gravity of the next higher scale universe is pulling the matter in this blackhole universe that we live in apart?  Is it the missing Dark Energy?  Is that the dimension where gravity leaks?

I wish I knew some cosmic mathematics to delve deeper into these ideas.  But I'm sure someone who does can tell me why I'm wrong and why a singularity can expand, can even inflate, without bending any rules of blackholes.

Regards,

Kevin

 

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  • Asked by kpicton
  • on 2010-01-06 22:35:10
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Categories: Our universe.

Tags: Universe, bigbang, blackhole, Inflation.

 

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To ponder: Could time be accelerating with the expansion of the universe?

From NewScientist.com-

"This is a tale of two spacecraft. Pioneer 10 was launched in 1972; Pioneer 11 a year later. By now both craft should be drifting off into deep space with no one watching. However, their trajectories have proved far too fascinating to ignore.

That's because something has been pulling - or pushing - on them, causing them to speed up. The resulting acceleration is tiny, less than a nanometre per second per second. That's equivalent to just one ten-billionth of the gravity at Earth's surface, but it is enough to have shifted Pioneer 10 some 400,000 kilometres off track. NASA lost touch with Pioneer 11 in 1995, but up to that point it was experiencing exactly the same deviation as its sister probe. So what is causing it?"

Other things I have read about time have led me to wonder if maybe the craft aren't moving faster, but rather our perception of time is changing.

Another user on this site asked if time travel might be possible by further expanding or re-collapsing the universe to speed up or "rewind" time. I don't think traveling back in history could be done using this method, but it may be like flooring the gas or pushing the brake on time itself. He also pointed out that what we perceive as "time" is a dimension probably restricted to this universe, but because of that it may be pushing against the limits of its ever-expanding confines. If he's correct, then might time be "stretching" to fill the universe, thereby "stretching" our perception of it?

Just an idea to toss around.

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Categories: Our universe.

Tags: Universe, time, bigbang, Timetravel, Inflation.

 

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