02-26-2026, 09:35 PM
I must not be as smart as I thought... not that that's anything new...
Anyway...
I made the mistake of watching a JWST universe expansion video and now I want to kill either physics or Google AI.
And this is just the observable part being questioned about....
Q1- How big was the universe at the end of the Inflationary Epoch?
Q2 - How big was the universe at the time of CMBR image when it was 375,000 years old?
Q3 - How big was the universe when the earliest galaxies formed 300 million years after the big bang?
Q4. How old was the universe when expansion accelerated?
Q5 - How big was the universe at 6 billion years old?
Q6 - How big was the universe when it was 9.9 billion years old?
So we have 7 time stamps and sizes now...
Google AI is trolling me....
It's simple division too. 42 million over 375,000 leaving an AVERAGE expansion rate of 112 times the speed of light. It grew 84 million light-years years in 375,000 years "post-inflation."
Then 1.48 billion light-years of linear expansion in 300 million years. Followed by 17.5 billion light-years years in 5.7 billion years.
Then we hit the beginning of "acceleration" at 6 billion years old.
The next next jump takes you expands another 17.5 Billion light-years in radius to roughly 35 billion light-years in 3.9 billion years.
The final jump during the acceleration period is another 11.5 billion light-years or radius expansion in 3.9 billion years.
Which is less... but leaving these expansion rates:
I asked and asked and kept getting similar answers. None of which seem to follow what they say should be happening.
I think google is using a different source every time, but it still shouldnt be this weird.
Anyone that does math want to explain to me why I cant get google to give me anything the least bit consistent or that lines up?
Because this makes me think dark whatever is an illusion of inconsistent measurements.
I also never read before yesterday that "inflation was initially only to the size of a softball, or up to .9 meters... before a "slower" "hot big bang" expansion started.
Nevertheless, I cant ask google and get an answer that shows anything exponential or even parabolic with this, and I dont physics well enough to figure it out..
Anyway...
I made the mistake of watching a JWST universe expansion video and now I want to kill either physics or Google AI.
And this is just the observable part being questioned about....
Q1- How big was the universe at the end of the Inflationary Epoch?
Quote:At the end of the inflationary epoch (approx. 10 -³²), the observable universe rapidly expanded from a subatomic size (around 10 -³² meters) to a size roughly comparable to a grapefruit or a small ball, roughly 10-² to 10-¹ meters in radius. Some estimates suggest the observable patch was about 0.9 meters across.
Q2 - How big was the universe at the time of CMBR image when it was 375,000 years old?
Quote:At the time of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR) emission, roughly 375,000 to 380,000 years after the Big Bang, the universe was approximately 1,000 to 1,100 times smaller than it is today. While the current observable universe has a radius of about 46 billion light-years, its radius at the time of the CMB was roughly 40 to 45 million light-years.
Q3 - How big was the universe when the earliest galaxies formed 300 million years after the big bang?
Quote:At 300 million years old, the observable universe was roughly 2 to 3 billion light-years across (a radius of about 1 to 1.5 billion light-years). At this stage, shortly after the first stars formed, the universe was expanding rapidly but was significantly smaller than its current size of 93 billion light-years.
Q4. How old was the universe when expansion accelerated?
Quote:The universe started to accelerate its expansion approximately 7.8 billion years ago.
Q5 - How big was the universe at 6 billion years old?
Quote:Size at 6 Billion Years Old: While the entire universe is likely infinite, the part we can observe (the radius) was roughly 30–35 billion light-years in radius.
Q6 - How big was the universe when it was 9.9 billion years old?
Quote:When the universe was 9.9 billion years old (about 3.9 billion years ago), it was roughly 75% of its current size, with an observable radius of approximately 30–35 billion light-years.
So we have 7 time stamps and sizes now...
Quote:1. Singularity size (@ 10 -³⁶ seconds)
2. Grapefruit or ball size (@ 10 -³² seconds)
3. 84 million light-years in diameter. (@ 375,000 years)
4. 3 billion light-years in diameter (@ 300 million years)
5. 35 billion light-years in diameter (@ 6 billion years)
6. 70 billion light-years in diameter (@9.9 billion years)
7. 93 billion light-years in diameter (@ 13.8 billion years)
Google AI is trolling me....
It's simple division too. 42 million over 375,000 leaving an AVERAGE expansion rate of 112 times the speed of light. It grew 84 million light-years years in 375,000 years "post-inflation."
Then 1.48 billion light-years of linear expansion in 300 million years. Followed by 17.5 billion light-years years in 5.7 billion years.
Then we hit the beginning of "acceleration" at 6 billion years old.
The next next jump takes you expands another 17.5 Billion light-years in radius to roughly 35 billion light-years in 3.9 billion years.
The final jump during the acceleration period is another 11.5 billion light-years or radius expansion in 3.9 billion years.
Which is less... but leaving these expansion rates:
Quote:Inflation to CMBR = 112•C
CMBR to 300M years = 4.9•C
300M years to 6B years = 3.1•C
6B years to 9.9B years = 4.48•C
9.9B years to present = 2.94•C
I asked and asked and kept getting similar answers. None of which seem to follow what they say should be happening.
I think google is using a different source every time, but it still shouldnt be this weird.
Anyone that does math want to explain to me why I cant get google to give me anything the least bit consistent or that lines up?
Because this makes me think dark whatever is an illusion of inconsistent measurements.
I also never read before yesterday that "inflation was initially only to the size of a softball, or up to .9 meters... before a "slower" "hot big bang" expansion started.
Nevertheless, I cant ask google and get an answer that shows anything exponential or even parabolic with this, and I dont physics well enough to figure it out..


![[Image: 708880338595ab08c831fe3fc615f4d0.jpg]](https://denyignorance.com/uploader/images/708880338595ab08c831fe3fc615f4d0.jpg)





