(September 27, 2016 at 11:46 pm)chimp3 Wrote:(September 27, 2016 at 11:39 pm)Arkilogue Wrote: There is nothing more solid than all available space filled with quarks.Your claim is that an ocean can be both solid and infinite not mine!
All of relative void space-time is created at the inflation of a singularity that has no external border. It is infinite.
http://astronomy.stackexchange.com/quest...e-infinite
In the standard ΛCDM model of the Big Bang, the universe is infinite and has always been such. The Big Bang singularity happened everywhere, in the sense that far back enough in time, the density diverges to infinity at every place.
But this is just a particular model--it assumes that the universe if spatially flat and is globally homogeneous and isotropic. There are extended models in which it is not exactly flat, and so could be finite even if it is still homogeneous and isotropic (if the curvature is even slightly positive). And of course we don't actually know whether it is homogeneous and isotropic at scales much larger than we actually see. Some inflationary models imply that it isn't.
An ocean of pure matter, not molecular water.
"Leave it to me to find a way to be,
Consider me a satellite forever orbiting,
I knew the rules but the rules did not know me, guaranteed." - Eddie Vedder
Consider me a satellite forever orbiting,
I knew the rules but the rules did not know me, guaranteed." - Eddie Vedder