Wherever there is matter in an ever-thinning universe, there might be an entire cosmologically-sized era dominated by an entirely different chemistry to what we have now.
Wherever there is matter in an ever-thinning universe, there might be an entire cosmologically-sized era dominated by an entirely different chemistry to what we have now.
It is, but if the rate of expansion is constant (e.g. 0.1 m m-1s-1), then the acceleration in the speed of expansion that we observe is a result of the distance increasing.
So the space between two things that are 1 m apart will be expanding at 0.1 m s-1, while the space between two things that are 5 m apart will be expanding at 0.5 m s-1. As long as the force acting between two things is large enough to overcome the expansion rate right now, the distance between them will remain constant, because the acceleration is not a local effect but a result of the distance increasing.
As far as I understand, this is why we see other galaxies accelerating away from us, but don’t see any individual galaxy “ballooning”. Because locally (on the scale of a galaxy), gravitational forces overcome the rate of expansion. On large scales (to distant galaxies), there is effectively no gravitational pull, so the distance increases due to the expansion. When the distance increases, so does the observed speed of expansion, etc.
To reiterate: I’m in no way sure about this, it’s just my coarse understanding of our current explanation for what we observe.
No, all space is expanding. The space up in space just happens to look like it’s expanding faster because there’s more of it.
Nothing “overcomes” expansion. Not even the speed of light. There is a hard limit on how far telescopes can see into the cosmos because after a certain distance, the light emitted by stars will never reach the earth. This happens because the space between that star and our telescopes is expanding faster than the speed of light.
Now when you go to the other extreme, like subatomic particles, the same thing is happening, just much more slowly. You’ll need something like ten billion trillion years to actually see any hard effects from that expansion, but it’s still there. After long enough, even the space between atoms will expand faster than the speed of light. Fun fact: gravity also works at the speed of light. That’s the heat death of the universe.
Yeah. But the rate of expansion in general, at all scales, is indeed increasing.
The rate of expansion is determined by the Hubble constant, no? If I’m not completely mistaken, it’s commonly believed that the Hubble constant is slowly decreasing with time?