waynexk8 said:
Could numbers and speed like I did in my first post ? The rate of expansion say 50,000kph and if it was 10,000kph less each way, Planets would not have formed. Or is the number bigger or smaller in KPH either way ?
However, if you cannot use numbers like above, seems I am still not getting it. As it’s expanding at a rate of speed is it not ? ...
No it is not expanding at any particular rate of speed. In this context "rate of expansion" does not mean speed, it means something more like "percentage growth per year"
or "percentage growth per million years".
I added some stuff to my post #6, back a few. You might try looking back and see if it helps at all.
For any density you pick, there is an ideal percentage expansion rate. In post #6 I showed how to calculate it. If the expansion rate is even a tiny bit different things go haywire and you don't get normal foursquare level geometry like we appear to have.
Let's take a simpler problem. How do we say this in a clear way that would, for example, impress fraternity brothers and their dates, at a noisy beer party? I'm trying to think.
I told you the current expansion rate is 1/140 percent per million years. Multiply that by 1000. It is the same as saying that the current expansion rate is
7 percent every billion years.
If back near the start of expansion, that percentage had been even ONE PERCENT DIFFERENT from what it was supposed to be, the universe would have been føcked.
If anyone wants to check the exact statement I think that this is covered for example in a paper by Charles Lineweaver called "Inflation and the Cosmic Microwave Background" from some time around 2003, but it wasn't new then---that was just a pedagogical paper explaining wellknown stuff.
The density of the universe used to be much higher. Whatever it is, it is some number of nanojoules per cubic meter. You plug that in and you can find the critical rate of expansion needed at that density. Right now the density is 0.83 nJ/m^3. So plug that in:
Put this into google, it will give the billion year percentage cause it says 10^9 years.
sqrt((8*pi*G/(3*c^2))*(.83 nJ/m^3))*10^9 years in percent
When you put that in google, it will say "7.17 percent". You can try it for other densities. Like back when the universe was 1000 times denser than today, then you plug in
8.3 nJ/m^3 (which means 8.3 nanojoules per cubic meter)
and you will get a much larger percentage expansion rate. And
that must have been the rate back then (or very very nearly it) or the world would look very different and we might not be here.