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Did spacetime start with the Big Bang? I mean, was there any presence of this spacetime we are experiencing now before big bang? And could there be a presence/existence of any other space-time before the big bang?

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    $\begingroup$ By definition the big bang is start of everything! I doubt one can find even very popular decription, omitting that there is no sense in asking about "before" big bang. This does not mean that this is the one and only truth, but as long as one speaks about "big bang" question for "before" is free of meaning. $\endgroup$
    – Georg
    Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 10:19
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    $\begingroup$ @Georg: how so? Big Bang doesn't imply anything else than the fact that universe collapsed into singularity at one point in the past. But we know this is unphysical and when quantum effects are added there are various models like Big Bounce, etc. They are of course quite speculative but I think this is a fine question. $\endgroup$
    – Marek
    Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 10:30
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    $\begingroup$ @dimension10 Actually this is a good question, so long as "Big Bang" is construed as the beginning of the universe as we know it rather than simply "the singularity in an FRW universe." In fact, this question is at the heart of eternal inflation and cyclic universe theories, both being studied in various forms by quite a few reputable cosmologists. $\endgroup$
    – user10851
    Commented Jul 6, 2013 at 19:29
  • $\begingroup$ @Gulshan, Isn't this a duplicate of physics.stackexchange.com/q/136860/10389 ? $\endgroup$
    – Pacerier
    Commented May 27, 2015 at 4:55
  • $\begingroup$ @Pacerier This question was asked earlier. $\endgroup$
    – Gulshan
    Commented May 28, 2015 at 19:55

8 Answers 8

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The main theory which describes Space-Time and from which the prediction of the Big Bang comes is called General Relativity, from Einstein. This theory has several mathematical solutions and cosmologists worked to determine the most accurate. There are a class of alternatives but they all have the property that the equations which describe this solution have a singularity at $T=0$. Furthermore when this situation is examined physically it seems that there is a high density of all the Universe's matter there and then. So it is called the Big Bang.

The Singularity means that some terms become infinite and others unhelpfully become zero. So General Relativity has not been able to predict (or retrodict) what happens before, or how this process really began. The general assumption has been that it was some kind of giant Quantum Event. This assumption, when explained using a more complete theory of Quantum Gravity, may yet be correct.

However in the last few years, several mathematical cosmologists have taken seriously the idea that there was a Pre-Big Bang. Part of the reason for this may be because of the Cosmic Background Radiation data from satellites like WMAP. This data shows larger scale structure in the early universe than the older theories would have predicted.

In particular Roger Penrose has developed a view that the period since the Big Bang should be called an aeon, and that there were earlier aeons each infinitely long. This makes the Big Bang a kind of transition period between two aeons. The theory is speculative in several respects, but it is based on some mathematical constructions in General Relativity. This theory is called Conformal Cyclic Cosmology (CCC for short).

A recent short paper Concentric circles in WMAP data may provide evidence of violent pre-Big-Bang activity gives the general idea. Although it is technical in places it demonstrates the kind of evidence that is motivating this theory. There are references in that paper to a book and other papers which describe that theory.

There are other theories around too, which suggest a pre-Big Bang model, perhaps other answers will mention those.

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    $\begingroup$ Well in this kind of model the term "universe" just gets extended. So what we think of as the universe just becomes the current aeon. Having said that those earlier events are Pre-Big Bang and so are not part of the universe/aeon we now inhabit. The point of the paper is that those events nevertheless left an imprint on our Universe/aeon. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 11:35
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    $\begingroup$ It should also be pointed out that even without considering such Big Bang issues General Relativity allows for parts of our Universe to be separate from each other. The distinction there is between "Observable Universe" and "Universe" in the Cosmological sense. $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 11:43
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    $\begingroup$ Does the recently discovery, for which this year's(2011) physics noble prize is awarded, that the universe is expanding with an accilaration affects the pre-Big Bang model? $\endgroup$
    – Gulshan
    Commented Oct 14, 2011 at 18:22
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    $\begingroup$ The Gurzadyan and Penrose paper was shown to be wrong shortly after it was published. CCC also has other serious problems, such as the inability to cook up the right particle physics to make the universe end up as 100% photons. I realize you were just giving it as an example, but wanted to point out that its status as of 2013 is not viable. $\endgroup$
    – user4552
    Commented Apr 23, 2013 at 4:39
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    $\begingroup$ @baponkar --You'd want to specify the cosmological model involved, which is often identified by preprints posted on Arxiv by its originator, and can be found by their name. Capitalization of the word "universe" (as "Universe") usually refers to a local universe (most typically our own) in an inflationary multiverse. Whether time existed before what they have unconventionally half-capitalized as the "Big bang" is the OP's question, whose affirmative resolution usually involves a multiverse. The Aguirre & Gratton model I've cited in my answer shows diagrams usable in coordinate systems. $\endgroup$
    – Edouard
    Commented Dec 25, 2021 at 20:31
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I'm not a cosmologist either, which at least means I can speak in simple terms that don't assume you are deeply familiar with every mathematical permutation of the subject. As I understand it, the universe is expanding, not just in the sense of the material in it spreading out, but in the sense that space-time itself is expanding. If we run the clock backwards, then, everything comes together at a point, including space and time. Of course, physicists can't really model the point itself, but they can model the properties of the universe as we get close to the point and amazingly, the predictions seem to generally agree with what we see. Hence the idea of the Big Bang. But the human mind evolved in space time, so inevitably people picture this as a void in which there's nothing for awhile and then the universe explodes into being. This has to be wrong, though. What exactly is the void in this picture, since space does not yet exist? How can there be "awhile" before the big bang if time didn't exist "yet"? (Here the grammatical structure of our language works against us, since it assumes we are talking about something happening in space-time.) The simple way to keep your thought pictures honest is to remember that we can't see the universe FROM THE OUTSIDE, so don't try to picture it this way. The Big Bang can only be honestly pictured from inside the universe, so there's no meaning to the question of what happened "before" the Big Bang - it's a non sequitur. Similarly with the question "What was there before the Big Bang?" There "was" (time) no "there" (space) for there to be anything in. It sounds like you've already thought of this, which I take it is why you're asking the question. I don't think it is unreasonable to suspect that the earliest moments of the universe are not well modeled by the mathematics of infinities and infinitesimals, and that we don't really have a good grasp on this yet despite the agreement with the empirical data we have so far. But don't get sidetracked by physicists who get so caught up in the math that they forget that the model is not the thing modeled.

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The only well tested theory of gravity we have right now is general relativity (GR). In models based on GR, time and space only exist for $t>0$.

This raises the question of what caused the big bang. In relativity, we use the term "event" to mean a certain position in space at a certain time. The big bang is not an event, because there is no time $t=0$. If you want to find a cause for some event happening at a given time $t>0$, there is always some earlier $t'$, with $0<t'<t$, that can supply that cause. So in this sense, the big bang doesn't require a cause, because only events require causes, and GR doesn't describe the big bang as an event.

We also have fundamental reasons to believe that GR is inaccurate under the very dense and hot conditions at $t < ~ 10^{-43}$ s (known as the Planck time), because of quantum-mechanical effects. If we had a theory of quantum gravity that worked under those conditions, then it might turn out that the singularity at $t=0$ was not real, and events at $t>0$ could be explained in terms of causes at $t<0$. This is what seems to happen, for example, in loop quantum cosmology. However, nobody has a theory of quantum gravity that works and has been tested against experiment, so we don't really know.

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    $\begingroup$ IMO, you are arguing with the Zeno's Dichotomy_paradox and solved centuries ago. I cant decide between 2nd § (there is no t=0) and the third § (explain t>0 causes on the t<0 ones, avoiding t=0). Omitting a time label,.., a discontinuous time theory ? Omit one and then omit any, at will? $\endgroup$ Commented Feb 9, 2015 at 15:59
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Bear in mind that the real solution for the de Sitter spacetime is a scale factor $$ a(t)~=~\sqrt{\frac{3}{\Lambda}}\cosh \left(t\sqrt{\frac{\Lambda}{3}} \right) $$ for $\Lambda$ the cosmological constant. $\Lambda$ was very large in the early universe, and it is not unreasonable to think that the universe was connected by the “throat” to the other half of the hyperboloid.

This is similar to the problem of the white hole, which is the other half of the Schwarzschild metric. We generally ignore that, and so too most often the de Sitter spacetime is physically considered to be an exponentially expanding space where $\cosh(x)~\simeq~\exp(x)$ for large $x$. So we start with the FLRW energy equation $$ \left( \frac{\dot a}{a} \right)^2 = \frac{8\pi G \rho}{ 3} \; – \; \frac{k}{a^2} $$ Here "dot" means time derivative. This equation can be derived using Newton's laws, or the energy of a projectile moving in a gravity field.

The other half of the hyperboloid might physically involve an instanton state, or tunneling state. The Schrodinger equation for a particle moving in one dimension with some potential $V$ is $$ i\hbar\frac{\partial\phi}{\partial t}~=~-\frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{\partial^2\psi}{\partial x^2}~-~V(x)\psi $$ If we consider a stationary case with a phase $\psi(x,t)~=~\psi(x) \exp(-iEt/\hbar)$ the left had term just becomes $E\psi$, where $E$ is the energy of the particle. Now let us rearrange things so that $$ \frac{\hbar^2}{2m}\frac{\partial^2\psi}{\partial x^2}~=~(E~-~V(x))\psi $$ For a particle moving in space we set $\psi(x) \; \sim \; \exp(ikx)$, do the two derivatives and cancel out the ψ(x). $$ k^2 \;= \; \frac{2m}{\hbar^2}(E \; – \; V) $$ The funny thing is that for $V~>~E$ we have an imaginary $k$. This means that the kinetic energy is in a funny sense negative, which is not something you expect in classical mechanics. For a system of this sort it is in a classically forbidden region, and in more general systems there may be some dispersion $\omega~=~\omega(k)~=~vk~+~\dots$, which leads to an imaginary frequency. The phase for the system is $\exp(i \phi) \; = \; \exp(i \omega t)$. The imaginary quantity associated with the angular frequency ω may be reassigned to the time $t$, that is a mathematical triviality. So in some of these problems it is useful to use this and work with imaginary time, or what is sometimes called Euclideanized time.

So the other half of the hyperboloid might be physically modeled to be a tunneling of a cosmology across a potential boundary. This might then be an instanton due to a “blob” of vacuum energy which quantum escapes from another spacetime. So from that setting if may be seen that the universe has some sort of precursor. or is quantum mechanically tied to another spacetime. This might then be seen in the setting of a multi-cosmological universe or within what is called the multiverse.

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    $\begingroup$ Awesome answer +1. Needs some editing though. $\endgroup$
    – user346
    Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 14:11
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    $\begingroup$ What is the down-vote for? Seriously. $\endgroup$
    – user346
    Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 15:04
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    $\begingroup$ @space_cadet -I did not downvote it, but look at Gulshan's comment under the question--"A very naive question from a non-physics guy. I am here to learn." Do you think he could possibly follow that explanation? Mixing instantons and DeSitter spacetime with no explanation, then explaining that a dot means time derivative, which is obvious... otherwise, I agree the answer is very interesting speculation. +1 for the post, but not really at the level of the question asked. $\endgroup$
    – Gordon
    Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 15:34
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    $\begingroup$ @Gordon I don't think level should be relevant because there are people of all levels here. The questioner is not obliged to care about the most technical reply, but a well-crafted response is immensely helpful to a full-time physicist, given that the question also has more than just superficial relevance to theoretical physics. I suppose @Lawrence's answer might suit a question such "what is the Hartle-Hawking state" and "how does tunneling of false vacuum lead to the creation of a spacetime", but as Rumsfeld said we answer the questions we have not the questions we wish we had. ;) $\endgroup$
    – user346
    Commented Feb 14, 2011 at 15:46
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    $\begingroup$ This answer is nonsense, starting with the second sentence. $\endgroup$
    – user4552
    Commented Nov 20, 2014 at 1:16
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There are several cosmological models that are eternal to the past, as well as to the future: They include Aguirre & Gratton's 2003 "Steady-state eternal inflation" (vetted as plausible by Borde, Guth, & Vilenkin, in the last footnote to the last [2003's] version of the BGV Theorem, which is often misinterpreted as completely prohibiting past eternality, but actually only prohibits past eternality in models which are not "on average expanding"), Nikodem Poplawski's 2010 "Cosmology with torsion", and the 2010 "Conformal cyclic cosmology" formulated by Roger Penrose, who was awarded a 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics for his work on black holes, that are a major factor in that model.

The model by Aguirre & Gratton consists of two inflationary universes, each expanding at a quasi-exponential rate, that are causally-separated by a Cauchy surface: The "arrow of time" in each of them points in the temporal direction opposite the other's.

In Poplawski's torsion-based model, any large rotating star whose nuclear fuel has been depleted collapses gravitationally under its own weight due to the lack of radiation pressure adequate to prevent such a collapse, with the event horizon of that collapse combining with tidal effects to materialize fermions by separating them from their partners in particle-antiparticle pairs. The newly-materialized fermions interact with the stellar fermions (that are initially much larger), and that interaction spins the newly-materialized ones outward to form a new "local universe" that expands outward, at first at a quasi-exponential inflationary rate (although none of the specialized "inflaton" particles, found in older models of inflation and still only hypothetical, are required). Poplawski analogizes the shape of the new LU to "the skin of a basketball". Expanding indefinitely after its inflationary phase, it eventually contains black holes of its own, which repeat the process, apparently on sequentially-decreasing scales.

Although Penrose's 2010 model did suffer from the unclear and rather dubious evidence mentioned in the comments on an earlier answer to the OP's question, other evidence (found more recently) has supported it, as described in the 2020 revision of a paper by Meissner, An, and others, which described "spots of significantly raised temperature" that can still be observed in the Cosmic Microwave Background: Penrose considers those spots to represent the Hawking radiation of black holes from earlier "aeons" (in other words, earlier temporal iterations of a single universe much like our own). That paper appeared several months before Penrose's receipt of a 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics, which, however, was attributed more generally to his work on black holes and singularity theorems. "Conformal" theory preserves angles but not lengths, and Penrose's "Conformal cyclic cosmology" considers the thermal equilibrium of each temporal iteration, in an endless series of them, as the "Big Bang" of the next, with the "conformal rescaling" (which might perhaps be compared to the changes in scale implied by Poplawski's model) permitting this possibility through a gravitational "clumping" of matter into black holes, accompanied and/or followed by the evaporation of all of it into radiation, during a period of time whose phenomenally long duration cannot be specified, owing to the eventual lack of the fermionic components which Penrose feels to be essential in any form of clock (natural or artificial).

Of these three models, all but Poplawski's rely on 1915's General Relativity: Poplawski's, instead, relies on 1929's Einstein-Cartan Theory, a version of relativity that was formulated (through collaboration between Einstein and Cartan) a few years after the discovery of particulate spin, and requires that fermions (i.e., "matter particles") have a tiny spatial extent, some few orders of magnitude greater than the Planck length (which is the shortest distance observable through the magnification energies and procedures that are currently available to us). However, as each of his "local universes" inherits its direction of rotation from its "parent", his model would be falsified if astronomical evidence failed to reveal a prevalent direction of motion. Such a prevalence appears to have been discovered recently, by the astronomer Lior Shamir.

Aside from that last bit of observational evidence, I have to add a preference for Poplawski's model over the other two I've mentioned as having the same characteristic of eternality both to the past and to the future. My preference is partly because it doesn't (unlike Penrose's) require a singularity, and partly because the formation of the sequential "local universes" more-or-less concentrically within each other, in the Polish-American physicist's model, might provide a gravitational reason for that expanded distribution of matter which accompanies the expansion of space that was fairly well-established by the SN1a experiments of the 1990's. (The 2021 version of a preprint by Poplawski, freely visible at https://arxiv.org/abs/1906.03947, eliminates both fluids and subatomic particles as possible forms of dark matter.) By integrating scalar changes between large and small into the passage of time, each of the LU's in Poplawski's model would also provide the clearest example of a universe "expanding into itself", to use the terminology cited in the remark (mentioned earlier in this Q&A) by Nobel laureate John Mather.

As each local universe in Poplawski's cosmos continues expanding "indefinitely" after the bounce I've described (or a series of them, linked to baryogenesis with the temporal spacing that Gamow had first related to the proportions of various elements found within each LU), the overall effect is that averaging between expansion and contraction which was required by BGV.

Since it had been discouraged by a traditional assumption that infinity might necessarily lack any inherent shape, the plausibility of closed local universes or bubble universes, in Poplawski's and other models of an inflationary multiverse, has been greatly increased through a recent study of CMB data by Joseph Silk and collaborators, published in Nature Astronomy, Vol.4, Feb. 2020, p.196-203. (The magazine article, titled "Planck evidence for a closed Universe and a possible crisis for cosmology", is currently available free online, but that may change.)

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  • $\begingroup$ Coverage of a Nov. 2018 conference in Lima described Poplawski as comparing the spatial extent of a fermion, in each local universe, to that minimal unit of space which quantum mechanics has been wanting. Here's a summary of his presentation there, although I can't pick that conclusion out of its math: indico.cern.ch/event/701855/contributions/3161054/attachments/… $\endgroup$
    – Edouard
    Commented Dec 18, 2021 at 17:34
  • $\begingroup$ A preprint detailing the astronomer Lior Shamir's conclusions, coincidentally favoring Poplawski's model, can be found at arxiv.org/pdf/2101.04068.pdf . $\endgroup$
    – Edouard
    Commented Dec 20, 2021 at 4:58
  • $\begingroup$ The possibility that multiple bounces occurred in the formation of one or more of Poplawski's local universes is specified in Desai's 2015 article titled "Non-parametric reconstruction of an inflaton potential". $\endgroup$
    – Edouard
    Commented Dec 23, 2021 at 21:13
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This relies on an empirical finding as to whether spacetime is finite or infinite. We already know that the Big Bang occured a finite amount of time ago.

If spacetime now is discovered to be finite then the Big Bang started at a point.

If spacetime now is discovered to infinite then spacetime at the Big Bang was also infinite because infinity divided by any finite number is infinite. It also means that the Big Bang didn't occur at a point but everywhere, all at once, in an immense flood of light. I say light, because everything at the Big Bang was massless (the Higgs field, at the Big Bang has a vev that is too low to give any elementary particle, including the Higgs boson, mass) and hence moved at the speed of light and so was akin to light.

It also shows that the density of particles at the Big Bang can't have been infinite either, again because infinity divided by any finite number is still infinite).

Hence, let there be light as a description of the world is pretty accurate.

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  • $\begingroup$ "Let there be light" is a quotation of a well-known command (real or imaginary), not a description. I believe its source contains many helpful recommendations, but characterization of the entirety of that source as an absolute guide might, plainly, actually interfere with whatever role of agency might devolve upon our species, and enable an ignorance of its ability to adapt, for the benefit of itself and the other species sharing our biosphere. They may all depend, locally and eventually, on that ability. $\endgroup$
    – Edouard
    Commented Dec 10, 2021 at 20:34
  • $\begingroup$ "Let there be light" is both a command and a description after thst command has been fulfilled $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 10, 2021 at 22:20
  • $\begingroup$ That's true, but there is no clear scientific evidence either for the issuance of the command or for its fulfillment, especially given the alternative possibilities I've provided in my answer, which is not intended to absolutely rule out the possibility that our environment might be an artifact whose creation was emotionally motivated, but simply to consider actual &/or prospective evidence for alternatives to that motivation: Houses, for instance, are basically artificial, but beings to whom they might seem to be entirely natural formations can easily be imagined. $\endgroup$
    – Edouard
    Commented Dec 11, 2021 at 5:16
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    $\begingroup$ @Edouard: The Bible is sacred scripture and not a scientific document. So looking for scientific evidence in there is a bit of a non-starter. Nevertheless, we do have post-hoc evidence of a scientific nature that the world began with a flood of light. And that should give anyone some food for reflection, whether or not they subscribe to an Abrahamic religion - apart from fundamentalist athiests who are just as dogmatic in their assertions as religious fundamentalists but are even worse because they think science backs them upto the hilt. $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 12, 2021 at 9:37
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    $\begingroup$ @Edouard: Tegmark makes a very boring neo-neo-Pythagorean. I think the early Pythagoreans had aclot more interesting ideas on cosmology than Tegmark's notions. $\endgroup$ Commented Dec 12, 2021 at 19:56
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I seriously doubt that. There are quite a few theories trying to discuss "the beginning of the universe", and not all of them agree with having a "beginning" to the universe.

I don't have concrete facts to support what I'm about to say so consider it as "just another idea."

"Our whole universe was in a hot dense place, then fourteen billion years ago expansion started." So there was a big explosion, and everything tried to get away from every other thing. This process has been going on for about fourteen billion years, and it will eventually stop. Because a big portion of the attracting/repelling forces (electromagnetic force which can attract and repel) will have been neutralized (like a stone which does have electrons and protons but doesn't attract or repel), and the attracting forces (gravity) will take over. The universe starts to get smaller and denser, and collapse into a small hot dense place, and in "hot places", the repelling forces will eventually take over, and so another bang happens, and it will create a universe much like of our own.

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The one thing certain about how the big bang occurred is that nobody knows for sure. Firstly, space is the nothing between two somethings, and time is not matter, and not energy, so what is it? Something that is used to callibrate the period between the happening of one event and another. Time has been going on for ever. I think the universe, as we know it, is one of an infinite number out there (I’ll call them nodes unless someone has a better word) in the greater universe. I think large black holes are eventually doomed by their ability to contain more energy than they emit (Hawking radiation decreases as mass increases). This would make them hotter and hotter, increasing the force of expansion, and decreasing the radius at which gravity can hold matter in (Schwarzschild radius), even if it is only trickling in at 1 or $2^{o}$K. One that big would probably contain all energy. The heat generated from matter falling into it as well as energy trickling in from other nodes (or remains of nodes), when it gets there, would all be contained, increasing the temperature. The thing that would make them unstable is that the larger they are, the higher temperature needed to force them apart, which means, if they were to lose matter, it would take less temperature. If the energy to mass ratio collected was high enough, there should be 2 possible senarios:

1: The temperature could slowly increase, increasing the force of expansion, and decreasing the Schwarzschild radius, causing matter to be shed at the surface, where the force of expansion is now greater than the force of gravity, slowly decreasing the mass and weaking the gravity, which would decrease the Schwarzschild radius further and cause matter to be shed more quickly, starting a runaway reaction, which would increase out of control as the gravity decreased, but not the temperature.

2: If it was on the borderline, or starting to shed matter and a black hole, which once was a galaxy in a previous node was to hit it, especially at an angle, a wave would be pushed up, sending matter above the threshold and escaping in a gush. This, along with the initial impact would send a shockwave across the black hole, causing more matter to escape from the surface, which would emit another shockwave, and so on. By now, the black hole has lost a significant amount of matter, reducing the gravity, tipping the balance in favor of the force of expansion, allowing more matter to gush out, weakening the gravity more. As it gets smaller, the situation gets worse, tipping the balance more in favour of the force of expansion, causing the whole thing to lose it's grip and explode in a huge BIG BANG.

With scenario 1, I would expect a smooth explosion, starting slowly at first, and getting faster as gravity decreases.

With senario 2, I would expect it to be much quicker and very chaotic.

When our stars have all burned out, and the galaxies have collapsed into black holes, they, and the energy, when it gets there will become some of the building material and energy for other big black holes that are yet to explode. This could have been going on for an infinite amount of time (something had to be here for an infinite amount of time), and could go on forever if the whole universe is absolutely 100% efficient (no matter or energy lost), or it would wither away of freeze. The way it can be 100% efficient is by being infinite. No matter where the stuff goes, it will be in the greater universe, and will eventually be recycled.

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