Jocko Homo said:
So the Big Bang is "the beginning" of the Universe only in the sense that it's the earliest discernible history of the known Universe? Does this mean "what came before the Big Bang" or "what caused the Big Bang" are sensible questions?
Well, I should mention that not in all models are they both sensible questions. Stephen Hawking has a no boundary proposal, for instance, that still demands an answer to "what caused the big bang", but if true would mean that the question "what came before the big bang" doesn't make sense.
So...it depends.
Jocko Homo said:
How can any geometry be "a little bit open?" I'm pretty sure these are
propositions: they're open or they're closed. It's like trying to say that something is a little bit infinite. Something can be big but it can't be a little infinite...
It's about the radius of curvature. An open universe with strong curvature might have a curvature radius of the order of a Planck length, for instance. An open universe with very weak curvature, on the other hand, could have a curvature radius many times the size of the observable universe.
Jocko Homo said:
Why do we think the Universe is isotropic?
The cosmic microwave background is the same in every direction on the sky to one part in 100,000, once the dipole signal from our own motion is removed (before that removal, it's the same to one part in 10,000).
Jocko Homo said:
I'm sorry but I'm a little confused on this point: do we think the Universe is closed?
There is no evidence one way or the other at the current time. We just know that the radius of curvature is much larger than the observable universe.
However, I should mention that because the curvature radius must be larger than the observable universe with current observations, if we ever do detect a definitive curvature signal, we won't be able to say definitively that the entire universe has this same curvature: we could potentially be just in a part of the whole that happens to have open or closed curvature, and other parts might have different average curvatures.
To see how this sort of thing can happen, consider a torus in three dimensions. The interior surface of the torus has negative curvature, while the exterior surface has positive curvature.