I'm just going to address two responses, where I probably wasn't being sufficiently clear in what you were responding to. They are related:
Fredrik said:
5. I don't follow your logic here. (I can't say what the error is since you didn't explain your argument in detail, but you'll probably figure it out on your own if you try to explain the details to yourself). The universe can certainly be much bigger than the part we can see. It's even possible that it was infinite at all times (t>0). Also, I think that the SciAm article I linked to explains that the most distant things we can see are now farther away than 14 billion light-years, because the space between us and them has expanded since the light they emitted started moving towards us.
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8. I don't think inflation is necessary for us to see something that's 46 billion light-years away today. An expansion of the sort that's still going on today is sufficient. I don't know how much the Hubble constant has varied, and I don't know anything about that coincidence.
5. I wrote:
What is the error in thinking that the Hubble constant is the inverse of the age of the universe, which means (if the big bang was originally a singularity) that the fastest anything else in universe could be receding from us would be the speed of light and that, therefore, there is nothing outside the 14 billion light year radius (nothing as in no stars/galaxies and nothing as in no space for stars/galaxies to be in)?
Start with a singularity, which means everything is in one spot (to the extent possible, noting that there is a limit to how much energy you can squeeze into a small space, but also noting that prior to the big bang it could be said that there was no space which could be too small to take all the energy which was around just after the big bang). If the Hubble constant is the inverse of the age of the universe, you have at t=0 you sort of have everything in one spot and a meaningless Hubble constant (which is ok, because the big bang has not happened yet so nothing really exists).
Then, after the first Planck time you have your "grapefruit" (I can't address what happens in the period in between) and an extremely high Hubble constant. Let's say that at the edges of the "grapefruit", space "wants" to expand at some speed greater than lightspeed (because at t=1.t
pl, if the Hubble constant is 1/age of the universe, things would only have to be one Planck length apart to expand at the speed of light but the "grapefruit" would have been substantially bigger than that). At the same time, you have an extremely high density of energy, which like a galaxy would not be "wanting" to expand. This would lead to a period (an era, if you like) in which you'd have conflicting forces, expansion and gravitational clumping, the end result of which would be a big bang.
Now, there are two options here, depending on what happens in galaxies today. Does space expand less swiftly in galaxies or does space continue to expand at the same rate but the galaxies sort of stick together with the expanding space sliding past the constituent stars. In other words, at the galaxies embedded in space (like two imperfections on an expanding balloon) or just "sitting on" space (imagine an elastic drum skin being stretched with two tethered weights sitting on it, the skin would slide under the weights)?
I think the former, so I will go with that.
If galaxies are embedded in space, then they are locally resisting the expansion. The same phenomenon would have occurred during the big bang with universe's energy resisting a fair proportion of the hyperinflationary expansion, and I suspect that this hyperinflationary era would have lasted until the universe reached a balance point, namely where the edges of what was a "grapefruit" would expand at c, rather than >c.
So, you have an era of hyperinflation and you have then a "modern" era, all guided by a consistent Hubble constant = 1/age of the universe.
I think that at the time of the interface between the two eras, if you were able to exist there and take measurements, you would see that the universe's radius = Hubble distance, or in other words the distance that anything traveling at the speed of light would have traveled since t=0. Since then, the universe's radius would have consistently been the Hubble distance. If that is the case, then the universe would have a radius of 14 billion light years and nothing would lie outside of that radius - no stars, no galaxies, no space for them to be embedded in.
However, it could be that things were not so evenly balanced, so that by the time that things settled down, the universe's radius was greater than the Hubble distance. By how much, I just don't know - possibly enough that the universe's radius today is 46 billion light years. I don't like it, I prefer a 14 billion light year radius universe, but I see that it is possible and the universe is under no obligation to satisfy my preferences.
8. If you have got the gist of what I wrote before, perhaps you can understand why a hyperinflationary era is necessary to see something today which is more than 46 billion light years away, if Hubble constant = 1/age of the universe. The hyperinflationary period is not inconsistent with this Hubble constant. It is just that the early universe's balance between expansion and energy density's resistance to expansion would have been tipped in favour of expansion, rather than in favour of resistance (no big bang) or neutral (modern day universe which has a radius no bigger than 14 billion light years).
cheers,
neopolitan