- #1
Mihai
- 2
- 0
After the Big Bang it was a short period of inflation. After that the physics that we know is supposed to apply.
After inflation the speed of the expansion was smaller than the speed of light and all the mass of the universe was in a relatively small volume.
Why was not the universe a black hole then ? After all, it has enough mass to create a lot of black holes.
I suppose that the inflation pushed matter (or radiation) beyond the horizon of a black hole with the mass equal to the mass of the universe. Can someone give some numbers and some explanations about that, or at least some pointers to where I can read more about it ?
After inflation the speed of the expansion was smaller than the speed of light and all the mass of the universe was in a relatively small volume.
Why was not the universe a black hole then ? After all, it has enough mass to create a lot of black holes.
I suppose that the inflation pushed matter (or radiation) beyond the horizon of a black hole with the mass equal to the mass of the universe. Can someone give some numbers and some explanations about that, or at least some pointers to where I can read more about it ?