Quote:
Originally Posted by neutralino
Ok, so no, the universe is not temporally infinite, but when most cosmologists talk about the "universe being infinite" they mean to say "spatially infinite," which is something that could be true (we don't really know yet!)
Whilst I know that some people here like talking about a "void," cosmologists do not mention such a thing (at least not in this context). Your definition of the void appears to be "non existence"-- since you admit that spacetime does not exist in the void, then there can't even be nothing there, but there is no "there." (Sorry, that sounds really philosophical, but I can't think of a way to explain it more succintly).
What does "prior to the big bang" mean? How do you measure time "before the big bang" (if such a statement is even well defined!) |
neutralino,
I divided your questions up into Points 1, 2 and 3 as follows:
POINT 1. We don't know whether the universe is spatially infinite, it could be that the universe is spatially finite & shaped like a soccer ball, per this link:
http://www.news.nationalgeographic.c...euniverse.html
POINT 2. Heinz Pagels, one of the first to hypothesize the quantum tunneling origins of the big bang, in a 1982 paper, had this to say about the void:
"Hawking and Hartle calculate the probability for the universe to emerge from a state of 'nothing,' as in Alex Vilenkin's model, to the state of 'something.'"
Pagels earlier recounts Alex Vilenkin's account of "nothing" in Vilenkin's first quantum-gravity model. (A. Vilenkin, "Creation of Universes from Nothing," Physics Letters 117B (1982)
Pagels says that in Vilenkin's early model, "nothing" does not refer to a quantum-mechanical vacuum or empty space. "'Space is still something,' Alex once remarked to me, 'and I think the universe should really begin as nothing. No space, no time-nothing.'"
"The nothingness "before" the creation of the universe is the most complete void we can imagine-no space, time or matter existed. It is a world without place, without duration or eternity, without number - it is what the mathematicians call "the empty set."
Pagels wonders what are these laws written into that void? What "tells" the void that it contains a possible universe? It would seem that even the void is subject to law, a logic that exists prior to space and time.
Like most other physicists, Pagels uses "creation" to mean the beginning to exist of something; he does not use this word in a theological sense.
Pagels ideas and quotes taken from "Perfect Symmetry: The Search for the Beginning of Time,"
Heinz Pagels (1985)
http://www.amazon.com/Perfect-Symmet...8594310&sr=1-9
(NOTE: AMAZON HAS A USED COPY OF $0.01!!!)
Thus, we have at least one cosmologist, Pagels, discussing The Void, which seems to match up with how I defined it for my thought experiement, i.e., no mass, energy, space, time, not even a vacuum with quantum jitters.
POINT 3. That's a good question, how to define (much less measure) time before the Big Bang. I'll leave it to Steven Hawking again, he proposed a concept of "imaginary time" per this link:
http://www.everythingforever.com/hawking.htm
But....he used this 'imaginary time' to argue for the universe being infinite, which means I can't throw a baseball out of it, if he's correct

Well, hopefully we can somewhere find some agreement.
As for myself and 'time', I just realized the
time here is 5:00 am
so good night!!
stevemc2