- #1
Leonardo Muzzi
- 26
- 2
Since in the beginning of the universe all matter was concentrated in a ridiculously small space, how didn't the whole universe just ended up as a huge black hole right after the gravitational force appeared?
Only solution I can think of is that space itself was expanding faster than matter could gather together, and that this process continued long enough to prevent everything from collapsing.
But still, given the fact that galaxies hold matter together today while the universe is expanding, it is hard to think that matter couldn't just "resist" the expansion back then as it does now.
Only solution I can think of is that space itself was expanding faster than matter could gather together, and that this process continued long enough to prevent everything from collapsing.
But still, given the fact that galaxies hold matter together today while the universe is expanding, it is hard to think that matter couldn't just "resist" the expansion back then as it does now.