dontbelievthebull said:
Since expanding space is not limited to the speed of light, there is no limit to how fast space itself can travel. This can be described as the relative speed between space and nothingness. Anyone think it's too broad a statement to say that infinity is the relationship between space and nothingness?
There are no compelling reasons to think that our
universe is infinite, in any sense.
Suppose that the speed of light is a consequence of,
and directly proportional to, the the rate of expansion
in any arbitrarily circumscribed region of our universe.
(That rate might increase as you get closer to the edge
of our universe.) The edge of our universe (in a big bang
scenario) might be viewed as the wave front of the shock
wave that is still moving isotropically away from the source
(the explosion that marks the beginning of our universe).
There's no way to know the exact volume or shape of the
original big bang -- just that it was appreciably smaller than
the visible universe. And, there's no way to know the
exact volume or shape of our universe -- just that it's
appreciably larger than the visible universe. (There are
some good reasons to think that, if it's finite, then it's
more or less spherical -- and if it's rotating, then the
sphere will tend to flatten out and become eliptical
in the plane perpendicular to the primary rotational axis.)
Assuming that a finite amount of kinetic energy was
imparted via the big bang, and assuming that the
'fundamental' medium in which the universal wave front
produced by the the big bang is moving has some physical
properties (even though they might remain forever
undetectable as far as we're concerned), then it's
reasonable to assume that the universe will eventually
dissapate.
Accepting a big bang scenario means that our universe
is a disturbance in some encompassing medium -- a
medium which is more fundamental than the interacting
particulate media (the flotsam and jetsam that is the
wake of the expanding universal wave) that we call our
physical reality.
However, since infinity might be taken to refer to an
unmeasurable extension of some physical process or
parameter, then your statement that,
space/nothingness = infinity is about as 'meaningful' as
anything else I've read on the origins and fates, or
nature, of our universe -- including, even though there
is a certain logical chain of reasoning associated with it,
what I wrote here. :-)