"If a single black hole can alter time, then it follows that time itself would come to a halt around the OB. When the 'Big Bang' happened all that mass was still in close proximity as it began to expand. The total mass of entire galaxies would still be in relatively small areas for light years away from the epicenter of the blast. As these galaxies began to spin out solar systems, they would still have incredible mass far beyond a black hole that would have temporal effects. 'Normal' time as we know it would not have existed until the masses of galaxies and their solar systems had sufficient separation to cross the threshold or 'event horizon' of the temporal effects caused by the local mass."
Show your math.
There is a theroy out there that says that the universe expanded drasticley before the elements settled into what we see now. I don't recall what I was watching when they were talking about it.
-------------------- Sparky:: Think! Question Authority, Authoritatively. “Believe nothing of what you hear, and only half of what you see.” EMSparks
Shalamar: To save face, keep lower half shut.
Registered: Jun 1999
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Daniel Butler
I'm a Singapore where is my boat
Member # 1689
posted
The various "inflation" hypotheses. For example, the provocatively named "hyperinflation."
Registered: Jul 2005
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