Khursed said:
I wonder about something.
How big would the event horizon of the universe be when all matter was infinitely packed together?
What you are asking about depends on your estimate of the total mass of the universe. Nobody has a scientific estimate of the total mass of the universe. So just pick one, making sure that it is bigger than the estimated mass of the observable piece of it that we know about.
The actual mass could be hundreds of times bigger, or infinitely bigger, than the mass of the observable piece of it.
At least we know for a fact that it's bigger, but we don't know how much.what you are asking about is big crunch---or quantum gravity bounce---conditions
there is some (quantum cosmology) theory that has been developed to deal with extreme condtions like that
and it still needs to be tested. Here is a sample
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/spires/find/hep/www?rawcmd=DK+quantum+cosmology+and+date+%3E+2005&FORMAT=WWW&SEQUENCE=citecount%28d%29
these are the most highly cited papers published since 2005 in quantum cosmology
Narrowing it down to even more recent, here are the most highly cited quantum cosmology papers published since 2006
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/spires/find/hep/www?rawcmd=DK+quantum+cosmology+and+date+%3E+2006&FORMAT=WWW&SEQUENCE=citecount%28d%29
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To respond to your question in terms of these papers, they deal with both cases where the universe has infinite matter/spatial extent
and where it has finite matter and finite spatial extent
In no case do you get a Schwarzschild black hole.
Space tends to collapse along with matter when you are talking about the universe as a whole, so it tends to be coextensive with it. If you have finite matter and you pack it down, then space gets very small too.
The idea of a Schwarzschild black hole radius in this case is meaningless. If the universe has collapsed there is no space for the radius to stick out into!
So you need to reformulate your question to be about something that makes sense. One way is to ask what the MAXIMUM DENSITY is that can be achieved in a big bounce type collapse.
In the topcited quantum cosmology papers they give results on this. From running computer models in many different cases they consistently get a bounce when the density reaches about 80 percent of Planck density.
If I remember right that is around 10
93 times the density of water. So if you want to get an idea of how big the universe is at the moment of a big bounce, all you need to do is chose an estimate for the total mass of the universe.
Then dividing by that density will tell you the volume. (at the moment of bounce).
Just for fun, let's find out what Planck density is.