"So it is answered as it is continually conserved to create what we know, from one point to the next." - Yes. each quantuum state can only interact with those states adjacent to it in quantuum space. A quantuum state can have significant dimensions in x/y/z, but no time is consumed when it...
How? Time has a granularity given by the Planck minima for time. Conservation must be observed as time increments at each successive state. Once time has stopped the question "how long did it take?" no longer has meaning. So the transition from all states uniform to a single collapsed state...
The 'contraction' of the cold universe back into a point happens outside of time so it takes no time to occur.
If you view it as a co-ordinate transformation the two end points are equivalent.
Hi, I'm new here but have been working in the physics field for years.
Most assume time to be infinite. But there appears to be a natural limit on the expansion of time.
In the beginning, there was nothing and no possibility of change. How long this state lasted is a misleading question for...