Was the entire universe a Black Hole for many years?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the concept of whether the universe was a black hole shortly after the Big Bang, based on the relationship between mass and radius. It highlights that if the universe began as a highly dense object, it would have exceeded the critical density required to be a black hole, raising questions about how expansion could occur. The inflation model is proposed as a potential explanation, suggesting a brief period where the universe expanded faster than light, allowing for movement away from a black hole state. Additionally, the conversation touches on the implications of virtual particles and energy in cosmology, as well as M-theory's perspective on the relationship between contraction and expansion. Overall, the thread explores the complexities of cosmological models and the challenges in understanding the universe's early state.
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I read that the determining factor of a Black Hole being created is when the mass of an object divided by its radius exceeds a critical point. If the number is more then this critical point then it is a Black Hole; if the number is less then this critical point then it is not a Black Hole.

Also, I read that if you replay the expansion of the universe in reverse, it leads to an extreme amount of mass in a small amount of space and eventually leads to the Big Bang theory.

My question is, if the only determining factor of Black Hole creation is mass divided by its radius exceeding a critical value, then it seems like the entire universe would have been a Black Hole for many of years after the Big Bang? And would remain a Black Hole until the universe had enough time to expand large enough until you could divide the mass of the universe by its radius and not end up with a number that is less than the critical value needed to be a Black Hole?

Was the entire universe a Black Hole for many years?
 
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What you're talking about is the Schwarzschild radius, the radius that light cannot escape.

I also wonder about this, since is the universe started as a very dense, small object, how did stuff fly out? It must've been very massive to contain all of our universe's energy too.
 
This is indeed one of the sticking points of cosmology, and it may be more troublesome than you realize. You see, objects within a black hole cannot move outward away from the center. This would seem to indicate that if the universe ever were a black hole, it still would be. It could not have "expand large enough until you could divide the mass of the universe by its radius and not end up with a number that is less than the critical value needed to be a Black Hole", because it could not expand at all.

Cosmologists are trying to reconcile this with the Big Bang model, and there are hopes that the Theory of Everything (which should unite QM with GR) will show some means by which this expansion is possible. One possible solution that has been put forward is the "inflation" model, which would have the universe existing in this black hole state for a very short time. In this model, the reason things could move away from the center is that everything in the universe was moving faster than light, but for a very short period of time (something like 10-35 seconds).

Which is about the amount of time I have right now, so I'll post more later :biggrin:.
 
Why do all Cosmologists assume that the universe started at one point, or atleast a very small point.

It makes sense to make this assumption because the universe is expanding, and things like the critical density.

If they believe in virtual particles, wouldn't it make sense to believe in virtual energy. Something that repays itself in forms of matter. Is it possible to think that at one time the universe was contracting, and all of the sudden large amounts of virtual energy makes its way into our universe. This might be very rare, but then again, with infinite time(if it exist) everything is possible. With all this virtual energy coming in all at once, it might have stimulated expansion. As we wait for the sudden change in virtual particles, that will draw energy towards it (to repay "loan"), the universe will continue to expand.

Of course, virtual particles is predicted from the Quantum/Uncertainty Principle. I am not aware about virtual energy.

Again, this type of universe creates more questions than answers.
 
I should also take a second to mention M-theory; that branch of QM which unifies the other five superstring theories into a single model. The details are not terribly important for the current discussion, but only one feature of the theory. M-theory was arrived at by showing that the other string theories were looking at the same equations from different perspectives. This meant that the "blind spot" in one theory could be covered by switching to another. As one set of numbers goes toward infinity in one theory, another theory sees those same numbers getting smaller (metaphor: as the number of shapes a string could take approaches infinity and becomes impossible to calculate, the number of shapes it cannot take becomes smaller and more easy to manage).

On of the results of this strategy shows that, below a certain critical value (a very very small value), there is no mathematical difference between contraction and expansion. This of course does not help explain why the expansion could contiue through the sizes in between this very small value and the Schwartschild Radius of the primal black hole, but it's a start.
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recombination_(cosmology) Was a matter density right after the decoupling low enough to consider the vacuum as the actual vacuum, and not the medium through which the light propagates with the speed lower than ##({\epsilon_0\mu_0})^{-1/2}##? I'm asking this in context of the calculation of the observable universe radius, where the time integral of the inverse of the scale factor is multiplied by the constant speed of light ##c##.
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Hi, I’m pretty new to cosmology and I’m trying to get my head around the Big Bang and the potential infinite extent of the universe as a whole. There’s lots of misleading info out there but this forum and a few others have helped me and I just wanted to check I have the right idea. The Big Bang was the creation of space and time. At this instant t=0 space was infinite in size but the scale factor was zero. I’m picturing it (hopefully correctly) like an excel spreadsheet with infinite...
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