I Does Space Compressibility Affect the Big Bang?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the nature of the Big Bang, emphasizing that it was an explosion of space itself rather than an explosion within pre-existing material. Participants explore the implications of this concept in relation to general relativity and the differences from terrestrial physics. There is interest in understanding the connection between space density, mass, and energy, as well as the potential for alternative models of spacetime that could explain phenomena without relying solely on curved space. The conversation raises questions about the viability of variations in space density compared to traditional models. Overall, the dialogue highlights the complexities of understanding spacetime in the context of the Big Bang theory.
Puma
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I was asking some Big Bang related question on Reddit and someone replied

"The big bang is an explosion of space itself. A shock wave requires an explosion propagating into pre-existing material.

Not only was there no pre-existing material, there was no pre-existing space to hold it.

This all makes sense in general relativity, but is somewhat alien to our terrestrial existence where geometry is Euclidean and physics is Newtonian."

I was not aware that there is a formula connecting space density to mass and energy? I would like to read more about this if it exists and would like to know if there a readable book on models of space time?

Are variations in space density in your opinion just as viable as curved space? Eg would all phenomena be explicable with such an alternative model.

Thanks in advance
 
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Puma said:
re variations in space density in your opinion just as viable as curved space?
Curved space means that there is more or less space in a sphere of a given circumference than in flat space. Is that what you mean by "variations in space density".
 
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