Saddlestone said:
OK maybe I can accept that definition now that the universe is big and relatively old and the concept of ancient light may be valid.
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That seems like a reasonable attitude. The period where there is ancient light goes back to about 380,000 years from the start of expansion.
The Friedman equation which is our model still continues to apply without change for a while as we go back earlier. But we have no light to observe to let us check the model! For quite a while back before year 380,000 it is just physics as usual. Rarified hot hydrogen gas. We know what that is like. Temperatures of 4, 5, 6000 degrees kelvin. Glowing too much to be properly transparent. All the light that gets to us comes from 380,000 or later.
There would have been plenty of light earlier, dazzingly bright. But we don't see that light because in those days the gas was too hot to let the light pass undisturbed. You probably know about this. Conditions like inside a very hot furnace or on the surface of a star. Well studied and well understood.
So we can run the Friedman model back in time and describe what it says, based on the physics we know from laboratory and other tests. But we can't verify.
Well, there are some confirming evidences, like the relative abundance of isotopes of various elements, but it is different because we can't actually SEE.
I think of fairly conventional timekeeping, in a universe we can see, as only extending back to around year 380,000 of the expansion. So there could be an uncertainty of on the order of 1000 years, or even 10,000 years. That doesn't seem like much uncertainty to me, when we are talking billions of years! So I don't worry about it.
Maybe someone else would like to respond to what you have to say about fractions of a second.
AFAICS that is just extrapolation based on the best physics we have so far. Inflation scenarios are guesswork. There is a lot more to be learned about the very very early period of expansion.
Good luck researching it!