puppypower
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I am not sure how to quote yet.
@puppypower: "Expanding spacetime" in the way you use this expression doesn't make sense.
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We infer that space-time is leading the expansion
What do you mean by "leading the expansion"?
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and we infer that dark energy is responsible for expanding space-time
No we do not. It only influences the rate. And it only does so in gravitationally unbound things, something we cannot reproduce in the lab. We can observe its effect in the universe. This is common - we also don't have a whole planet in our lab, or a whole star. That doesn't mean we should question the existence of planets or stars. It just makes some aspects of them harder to study.
Here is what I am mean. Say we placed a clock in a large empty vacuum chamber. We will infer changes in space-time by the clock changing time. We need to tweak space-time in the chamber, near the clock, however, we can't use matter to do this, such as by moving to the walls to alter the mass density around the clock. Instead, we need to use dark energy or something similar, but in this experiment, we nee dot make sure matter cannot lead. The vacuum is there to prevent the unknown darkish energy from expanding any gas, which will then lead to subtle space-time expansion changes, via matter. We do this experiment to show this is possible and not just theoretical.
Let me show you an alternate experimental way to create an inflation simulation. Say you were traveling on a spaceship close to the speed of light. You look out the window and notice that universal space-time appears contracted, due to your relative motion; relative reference affect. If we were to put on the brakes, and look out the window, the universe would appear to expand. This expansion is not due to dark energy or due to moving of matter. It is simply a window reference artifact, due to braking from relativistic speeds. Inflation may well be a record of a window view, of an earlier time, when energy reference; C, condenses into the inertial reference; matter references. This we can do in the lab. If we were energy at C, and suddenly condensed to matter/mass, there would be instant braking from C to below C.
Say we could theoretically travel at the speed of light; as energy. The universe will appear as a mass point instant. Say we slow to C-, by condensing our energy back into matter, which has to go less than C. As the condensation happens, we look out the window, the point universe appears to expand to finite size, instantly,. We get a window view of inflation, due to rapid energy to matter condensation and universal reference changes. We can still see things from the distant past, so inflation may be a reference thing, that still lingers throughout the universe.
@puppypower: "Expanding spacetime" in the way you use this expression doesn't make sense.
↑
We infer that space-time is leading the expansion
What do you mean by "leading the expansion"?
↑
and we infer that dark energy is responsible for expanding space-time
No we do not. It only influences the rate. And it only does so in gravitationally unbound things, something we cannot reproduce in the lab. We can observe its effect in the universe. This is common - we also don't have a whole planet in our lab, or a whole star. That doesn't mean we should question the existence of planets or stars. It just makes some aspects of them harder to study.
Here is what I am mean. Say we placed a clock in a large empty vacuum chamber. We will infer changes in space-time by the clock changing time. We need to tweak space-time in the chamber, near the clock, however, we can't use matter to do this, such as by moving to the walls to alter the mass density around the clock. Instead, we need to use dark energy or something similar, but in this experiment, we nee dot make sure matter cannot lead. The vacuum is there to prevent the unknown darkish energy from expanding any gas, which will then lead to subtle space-time expansion changes, via matter. We do this experiment to show this is possible and not just theoretical.
Let me show you an alternate experimental way to create an inflation simulation. Say you were traveling on a spaceship close to the speed of light. You look out the window and notice that universal space-time appears contracted, due to your relative motion; relative reference affect. If we were to put on the brakes, and look out the window, the universe would appear to expand. This expansion is not due to dark energy or due to moving of matter. It is simply a window reference artifact, due to braking from relativistic speeds. Inflation may well be a record of a window view, of an earlier time, when energy reference; C, condenses into the inertial reference; matter references. This we can do in the lab. If we were energy at C, and suddenly condensed to matter/mass, there would be instant braking from C to below C.
Say we could theoretically travel at the speed of light; as energy. The universe will appear as a mass point instant. Say we slow to C-, by condensing our energy back into matter, which has to go less than C. As the condensation happens, we look out the window, the point universe appears to expand to finite size, instantly,. We get a window view of inflation, due to rapid energy to matter condensation and universal reference changes. We can still see things from the distant past, so inflation may be a reference thing, that still lingers throughout the universe.