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[Editorial note: I'm going to revise this question according to the suggestions made in comments and answers during the next few days. Thank you all for your valuable hints.]

There's the "ant on a ballon's surface" story that's often told if it comes to trying to unravel the knot in people's brains due to this (alleged) contradiction. But it leaves out a whole dimension of space. That always was a trick too easy for my mind.

The final trigger to bring this question up here was a lecture called Physics in the Theatre: The mysteries of our dark universe on that matter (in German, no translation available), by Prof. Dr. Matthias Bartelmann. During the Q&A, starting at 1:24:12 he admits that even he doesn't have a better picture for "finite and unbounded at the same time" than the surface of a sphere.

Please note that the following is just for an analogy. It is not meant to be a new thesis, or even theory outside mainstream physics. (If you steal the idea and make it to the Nobel Prize with it, be assured I sue you. BTW, have you read the disclaimer? ;)

My assumptions are:

  1. There is a question here at physics that mentions that Einstein, in his book about relativity:

    [...] says that his theory predicts the shape of the universe.

    It would be finite but unbounded.

    That's what I'm referring to here.

  2. There is nothing outside of our universe. Nothing that is of interest for our physics, or any other science, for that matter. There's nothing for our understanding of "The Answer to the Great Question, of Life, the Universe and Everything"[1]. So, one can even say there's no outside at all.
  3. Einstein bent spacetime (Really. He did. Agreed, not only him. You do, too. Why? Well, he had mass. You have, too.). In short, mass bends spacetime. That means, even if you travel in uniform motion, the geodesic you travel on is almost never a straight line, because there's mass in the universe everywhere, much mass (There exist also masses of non-baryonic matter but I'm not going to consider those [here and now]. I agree, the universe is also big, really big, vastly, hugely, mindbogglingly big[1], so the average density of matter is low, very low, tinily, minusculely, ...[-1] low on a large scale (one proton in a cube with a 5 m edges, according to Prof. Bartelmann). However, gravity cannot be suspended, not even shielded, it always acts and always acts attractively (in multiple meanings of this word), it's simply there, everytime, everywhere (Great! That last even rhymes. Well done!). That means, unless the bending effect isn't smaller than one Planck length (that's 0.000000000000000000000000000000000016 m, BTW) there will be a tiny, minuscule, ... effect, at least, and it adds up.

Are these assumptions valid?

If a spaceman – let's call him Stephen – in a spacecraft – let's call it Hawk 42 – travels straight towards the border of the universe – and there is one, see 1. above – the closer he comes to it the more of the vast mass, nearly all mass at a certain point (apart from the spacecraft's cockpit instruments and its nose) is located behind him. In front of him pure nothingness, pure void, see 2. (I'm feeling a bit like on an esoteric trip with these words, but there aren't any better I'm aware of. Sorry for that.).

Now imagine what happens with space – that's bent by masses, see 3. – when all of the mass is located on one side of it and on the other side is simply nothing: it bends totally to the side with the masses whereby 'totally' means 180°. That means, space bends back into itself.

What happens to Stephen now? Nothing he recognizes immediately. He travels straight ahead like all the billions of light-years before, without even having the theoretical chance to recognize that he comes close to the border of the universe. He will recognize that there is a change of direction, first slightly then more and more until 180° if he looks at the star constellations that change in front of him – note: 'in front' becomes the former 'behind' more and more, automagically – until he's on his way back home without having to activate a single engine. (A very efficient way of travelling, isn't it?)

Key point is that from Stephen's point of view it seems as if he travels on a straight line while he's actually travelling on a universe-wide ellipse-like geodesic (A perfect ellipse if the universe would be a hollow sphere with its masses distributed equally, right?) due to space bent by the universe's masses. And this goes on forever since the same happens when he reaches the universe's border at the opposite side. So, for him it seems as if the universe were infinite, just the stars and planets repeat every few billion light-years – interestingly alternating: once from one side, once from the other side. Not later than that he should know... But hey! That's Stephen, he knew that before all of us.

Is this a reasonable explanation for the universe's endlessness? If it is not, is it a better metaphor, at least, than the poor, unfortunate ant on the sphere, crawling there for eternal times, without a chance to reach an end? I mean, compared to that Stephen is on his way home, repeatedly, after every few light-years.


1.↑ Douglas Adams: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, 1979

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    The literary style of your question is not really appropriate here -- not saying it's bad, just that it distracts from the meat of the question and makes it harder to read. – Javier Apr 16 '17 at 04:11
  • @Javier Thank you for the "literary". A tech and natural science addicted like me doesn't hear such too often. I think someone who has the knowledge and experience in his/her field that make him/her capable of answering the question is barely going to be distracted by some "literary style". What do you think about that? You're not you going to flag the question as "inappropriate" now, are you? – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 04:26
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    I think the more knowledge and experience of the reader the more likely they're going to be distracted, because they want to get to the point. Even though it looks good, we don't need such flowery language to understand what you're asking. – Javier Apr 16 '17 at 04:29
  • @Javier This is my very first try here. A bit of patience and lenience would be nice. This was in my mind for quite a while. Probably that's why it's that lengthy and "literary". – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 04:37
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    I like your style, but I agree with @Javier. I almost lost patience. Perhaps save your writing skills for answers rather than questions :) – pela Apr 16 '17 at 06:52
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    Assumption 1 is wrong. The universe did not start at a point and may be infinite. – ProfRob Apr 16 '17 at 08:00
  • @RobJeffries Do some of the maths not come to the result that the universe started at an infinite small point (which is the very definition of "point", you know) called singularity? – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 10:08
  • @pela Thank you for liking my style and for keeping patience. There are very good chances. My A:Q ratio on my top SE site is ~30:1, atm. – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 10:12
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    I refer you to "Did the big bang happen at a point" (as have others). A singularity does not necessarily $=$ a point. – ProfRob Apr 16 '17 at 10:22
  • Re put on hold: This question is asking for answers that evaluate its contents from the point of view of mainstream physiscs. I unconditionally accept a substantiated "It partially is, but ...", "Please have a look at ..." or a "No, it isn't at all". It's not an "unpublished personal theory" either. It's meant as a question in search for a comparison in other words of a thing that exists in mainstream physics . Hence, it's not easy to comprehend why it is rejected as a whole. – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 16:28
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  • "travels straight towards the border of the universe" - all of your confusion is right here. The "border" of the universe is in time, not space. No matter what direction he flies in, he is still on the same 3D volume that is moving through 4D. To return to the sphere analogy, if you are a 2D person that lives on the surface of a sphere, what direction do you have to go to reach the center? Its a direction you don't have. Here in the 4D universe, we call that direction "time", and try as you might, your watch keeps ticking upward. – Maury Markowitz Aug 03 '18 at 19:01

2 Answers2

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Assumption 1 is wrong, 2 is kind of philosophical (though more or less right), and 3 is correct. And every time I say this I feel bad, but I have to say it anyway: General Relativity is hard. People spend years learning all the background knowledge necessary to even begin to tackle learning GR itself. 99% of the time, coming up with conclusions without having formally studied the subject will lead to errors.

First let me explain why your argument is wrong, and then I'll try to talk about the ant on the sphere analogy.

Why is assumption 1 wrong? You're assuming the universe was finite at some point, but this is not true. See Did the Big Bang happen at a point? for an explanation. As far as we can tell today, the universe is infinite and has always been. You are probably correct in saying that if it was finite before it couldn't become infinite (though I'd have to do the math to be sure), but that's not the case (again, as far as we can tell).

I would just justify assumption 2 by saying that the universe is by definition everything that exists, so it makes no sense to say that something could be outside of it.

Finally, it's pretty nontrivial to figure out what kind of curvature a given distribution of matter will produce. If you were standing next to some kind of border it's true that all the matter would be behind you, but most of it would also be very far away, so I don't know if it would have a big effect. Also, your description of space curving back on itself is very vague; I for one don't know how to translate it into math to check if it makes sense.


The observations collected so far seem to say that the universe is infinite and more or less flat. Some years ago the most popular theory was that it was finite but borderless, like the sphere of the analogy. It's really hard to explain how this works in three dimensions without math, which is why people turn to the ant analogy. This analogy, by the way, is just that: an analogy. Of course it leaves out a whole dimension, because if we knew how to picture three dimensional curvature we wouldn't need the analogy. Unfortunately I think your best bet is just to trust the scientists who say that it makes sense. If you want to learn more to understand exactly how it goes, well, you have a few years of math ahead of you.

If you really want to try to visualize a periodic universe, try this one. Imagine the universe was the inside of a ball. We're 3D now, so no one is hiding any dimensions. This ball has a border, except it's not really a border. You should think of the whole sphere (the border of the ball) as being just one point: if you travel from the center to the "border" you can come out anywhere on this "border" depending on your direction of travel. In particular, if you go straight at it you will come out on the other side and eventually go back to the center. This is one way of visualizing a 3-sphere.

Javier
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  • Great answer. Although the ant-on-a-balloon analogy has several pitfalls, I think that for describing a finite but endless space, it is pretty exact (if you make sure people don't start asking about "inside the balloon"). The last paragraph more or less describes what in N-body simulations is known as "periodic boundary conditions" (although a cube rather than a sphere is used), which is the numerical way of dealing with infinities, or close-to-infinities. – pela Apr 16 '17 at 06:50
  • @pela Indeed, but if I did that with a cube I would get a 3-torus. The closed universe is a 3-sphere, which has a couple of differences: not only is it a sphere (duh), but the border is a single point, instead of identifying opposite points. Do that to a ball and you get SO(3). – Javier Apr 16 '17 at 12:32
  • Math is overrated–in the main. ;) Joking aside: I can comprehend that you feel bad about saying this. I doesn't sound too appealing. Imagine the one genius that could master it in a year stumbling across your answer here. There are chances that he or she decides to become an internationally respected politician, an honoured judge of the Supreme Court, a wealthy bank manager, a CEO of a hightech SW company. We've lost a brilliant physicist then. Perhaps Trump is right, after all: "So sad!". However, thank you for your answer. I'm going to accept the challenge of the "years". – Gerold Broser Apr 20 '17 at 04:46
  • Well, one year is still quite a bit of time. My point was more along the lines that watching documentaries is not enough to really understand this stuff; you have to get your hands dirty. – Javier Apr 20 '17 at 11:35
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Just a long comment for somebody who wants to visualize the universe as observations have defined it for us, using the General Theory of Relativity :

historyofunivverse

This is not an ant on a balloon, this is a two dimensional cut, representation, one space, one time, of our four dimensional universe (three space, one time), which mainstream physics accepts as the standard model.

In the first simplistic Big Bang model, all the universe started at one point and expanded from there, in a four dimensional explosion.

We, and your Stephen, are always at the rightmost point in this graphic representaiton, 13,8+ billion years from that explosion from the original point. In this model this means that right now, all of us including stars galaxies and clusters of galaxies, are at the border of the universe, as it expands. The "unknown" border is at the next instant of time, not of space. Space extends up to the curves shown in the graphic, and in the present cosmological mainstream model there is nothing outside those hyperbolic type lines. It cannot be reached in the sense of travelling there. Another way of seeing this is that one crosses the space borders every time one moves. Each of us is at a border given by the GR equations of the model.

In other words, for each of us, the (x, y, z) points we occupy were at the fuzzy point of discontinuity at beginning (t ~0) of the universe. Each of us is at the center of the universe.

Astrophysical arguments and observations forced a fuzzy, quantum mechanical region about where the big bang point was in the simple model, and a rapid inflation period, followed by a slower inflation up to now. The enormous energy of the universe, when the spatial dimensions were smaller forced the creation of matter as the graph explains.

As time goes inexorably on, the distances between galaxies get larger, and the eventual fate of this universe is expected to be very diffuse photons and maybe neutrinos. The answer by Javier to the model of Gerold describes other possible models. The above is the mainstream one for cosmology at present.

So the universe you assign to Stephen is not a model of the universe we live in.

Addendum by Gerold Broser

There are two further illustrations:

Timeline of the inflationary Universe
(source: nature.com)

  • Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology (KIPAC): Inflation, Stanford University, July 31, 2012

Inflation

Glorfindel
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anna v
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  • Thank you very much for your answer. I knew all this, however. I'm not a total noob on/in the universe. Partially I heard or said this myself in slightly other words here and there, but it's basically exactly that where I started from. However, with your introduction I take it as "for the records" for potential future readers anyway. Is that OK for you? – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 13:26
  • "In the first simplistic Big Bang model" – Do you mean the one by Lemaître that has been called Big Bang _ by Hoyle meant to be derogatory? "_all the universe started at one point and expanded from there, in a four dimensional explosion." – Has this "started at one point" substantially changed in our view of the BB over time or is it that the maths on it improved (substantially) and the number and quality of experiments and observations improved (substantially), as well? – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 13:35
  • "all of us [...] are at the border of the universe, as it expands. The border is at the next instant of time, not of space." – Yes, but in my question I was referring to space mainly, wasn't I? About time just in the way space and time are interwoven in spacetime. – Gerold Broser Apr 16 '17 at 13:39
  • The cosmic ray background radiation forced the model to include the inflation period and the fuzzy region where the old singularity was supposed to be. The accelerating expansion of space as seen above with the opening of the curve towards the right also from observations modified the model from the original Big Bang . see this https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/317599/was-there-a-first-moment-in-time/317687#317687 – anna v Apr 16 '17 at 14:35
  • the plot above has three dimensional space symmetrically. If the perpendicular axis is taken in series as (x,y,z) the picture will not change. It is the projection of the four dimensional sphere and the story is there. The singularity was there and the developement in time is seen clearly. The plot untangles space and time . Take a three dimensional sphere if you cut at (x,y) you get a circle in the plane. If you cut at (z,y) again you get a circle in the plane. This plot clarifies the role of time and space, even though they are connected through the General relativity equations. – anna v Apr 16 '17 at 14:39
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    Space goes off up to the limit of the expansion in the plot. There is no "outside" in the mainstream cosmological model ( the one that fits observations and data). My answer is to clarify for future readers what the data tell us. – anna v Apr 16 '17 at 14:41
  • Just a little complaint: I dont' agree with "that explosion". There was nothing that could have been exploded (in the usual sense of the word) and, more important, there was no space something could have been exploded into. – Gerold Broser Apr 17 '17 at 01:07
  • @GeroldBroser the mathematics look like the mathematics of an explosion, sudden expansion from a point . – anna v Apr 17 '17 at 04:26
  • I'm a bit confused now. In your answer you write: "[...] forced a fuzzy, quantum mechanical region about where the big bang point was in the simple model". (I assume Rob Jeffries referred to the same when commenting my question with "The universe did not start at a point") Now you say that mathematics show that there is still a point from which expansion occurred. BTW, you haven't clarified yet what I asked in my second comment regarding what the "simple model" was or is. – Gerold Broser Apr 17 '17 at 04:40
  • I am talking of the mathematics of the first naive description that gave the name Big Bang, why the name was given. – anna v Apr 17 '17 at 05:27