What Happens When the Particle Horizon Exceeds the Event Horizon?

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In a flat universe with dark energy and normal matter, the sum of the density parameters for matter and the cosmological constant equals 1. When the density parameter for the cosmological constant exceeds a specific value, the particle horizon can exceed the event horizon. This indicates that while the particle horizon relates to the universe's past, the event horizon pertains to its future. The particle horizon continuously expands, while the event horizon approaches the Hubble sphere in a cosmological model dominated by dark energy. Objects beyond the event horizon but within the particle horizon, such as distant quasars, can have light from their past reaching us, but their current emissions will never be observed.
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In a flat universe with dark energy (cosmological constant) and normal matter like ours, the sum of the density parameter for matter (Omega m) with the density parameter for the cosmological constant (Omega lambda) at the present time equals 1.

If Omega lambda is larger then a certain value the size of the particle horizon is larger then the size of the cosmological event horizon. What does this mean? What happens in a Universe where the particle horizon is bigger then the event horizon?
 
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I would say there is no relation between them. The particle horizon is related to the past and the event horizon is related to the future. To define our particle horizon one shall consider which would be the current position of a particle of zero mass sent at the beginning of time from our comoving position. On the other hand, our event horizon is the current position of objects whose light will never reach us (in future). The particle horizon grows always and the event horizon tends to the Hubble sphere (c / H) in case of a cosmological model dominated by the cosmological constant (like the current one). Objets beyond the event horizon but inside the particle horizon may be for example very far quasars; their light, emitted in past, is reaching us now, but the light they are supposedly emitting now, will never reach us in future.
 
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