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How Small Was The Universe At The Start Of The Big Bang?

  Today, when you look out in any direction as far as the laws of physics allow us to see, the limits of what’s observable extend to truly a...

 


Today, when you look out in any direction as far as the laws of physics allow us to see, the limits of what’s observable extend to truly astronomical distances. At the farthest reaches of our observable limits, the most ancient light we can see was emitted a whopping 13.8 billion years ago: corresponding to the hot Big Bang itself. Today, after traveling through our expanding Universe, that light finally arrives here on Earth, carrying information about objects that are presently located some 46.1 billion light-years away. It’s only due to the expanding fabric of space that the most ancient light we can see corresponds to distances that exceed 13.8 billion light-years.



As time continues to march forward, we’ll be able to see even farther away, as light that’s still on its way eventually reaches us. Nonetheless, at any given time, there’s a limit to how far away we can see: a limit to the observable Universe. This also means that if we went back to any point in the distant past, our Universe would also have a finite, quantifiable size: smaller than it is today, dependent on how much time has passed since the hot Big Bang.



But what if we went all the way back: back to the very beginning, and the very first moment of the hot Big Bang itself? Surprisingly, it doesn’t give us a singularity, where the Universe reaches infinite densities and temperatures at an infinitesimal size. Instead, there’s a limit: a smallest possible size that the Universe could have had. Here’s why that limit exists, and how we can figure out the minimum size of the early Universe.



This image shows a slice of the matter distribution in the Universe.

This image shows a slice of the matter[+]GREG POOLE, CENTRE FOR ASTROPHYSICS AND SUPERCOMPUTING, SWINBURNE UNIVERSITY

In our Universe, if we want to know anything about either what it will do in the future or what it was doing in the past, we need to understand the rules and laws that govern it. For the Universe, and in particular for how the fabric of the Universe evolves with time, those rules are set forth by our theory of gravity: Einstein’s General Relativity. If you can tell Einstein’s equations what all the different types of matter and energy in the Universe are, and how they move and evolve over time, those same equations can tell you how space will curve and evolve — including by expanding or contracting — at any point in the past or future.



The Universe we have is not only governed by Einstein’s General Relativity, but a special case of it: where the Universe is both:


isotropic, meaning that on average, it has the same properties in every direction that we look,

and homogeneous, meaning that on average, it has the same properties in all locations we could go to.

If the Universe is the same in terms of matter-and-energy in all places and in all directions, then we can derive a Universe that must either expand or contract. This solution was first derived by Alexander Friedmann and is known as the Friedmann-Lemaître-Robertson-Walker (FLRW) metric, and the equations that govern the expansion (or contraction) are known as the Friedmann equations.


How radiation, matter, and dark energy/inflation energy densities change with expansion.

While matter (both normal and dark) and radiation[+]E. SIEGEL / BEYOND THE GALAXY

If you can measure or determine what’s in your Universe, then these equations will tell you all about your Universe’s properties in both the past and the future. Just by knowing, today, what makes up your Universe and what the expansion rate is right now, you can determine:



what the size of your observable Universe is at any moment in the past or future,

what the expansion rate was or will be at any point in the past or future,

how energetically important each component of the Universe (radiation, normal matter, dark matter, neutrinos, dark energy, etc.) was or will be at any point in the past or future,

among many other properties.


We can do this as long as the types of energy in the Universe remain constant: as long as you don’t convert one form of energy (like matter) into another form of energy (like radiation) that obeys a different set of rules as the Universe expands. To understand what the Universe did in the distant past or will do in the future, we have to understand not only how every individual component evolves with time and scale, but to understand when and under what circumstances these different components transform into one another.


The different energy components in the Universe at different times.

Here in our Universe, based on what's in it today[+]E. SIEGEL

Today, the Universe, as we measure it, is made up of the following forms of energy in the following amounts.


Dark energy: this makes up 68% of the Universe, and is a form of energy inherent to the fabric of space itself; as the Universe expands or contracts, the dark energy density remains constant.

Dark matter: the second most-important component at 27% of the Universe, it clumps and clusters like matter, and its density drops as the volume of the Universe expands.

Normal matter: although it’s only 4.9% of the Universe today, it dilutes the same way as dark matter; as the volume expands, the density drops, but the number of particles stays the same.

Neutrinos: at just 0.1% of the Universe, neutrinos are interesting because they’re very light. Today, when the Universe is cold and low in energy, neutrinos behave as matter, getting less dense as the Universe expands and grows in volume. But early on, they move close to the speed of light, meaning they behave like radiation, which not only dilutes as the volume grows, but also loses energy as its wavelength stretches.

And radiation: at 0.01% of the Universe today, it’s practically negligible. The fact that it drops in energy density faster than matter means it gets relatively less and less important as time goes on. But early on, for the first ~10,000 years after the Big Bang or so, radiation was the dominant component of the Universe, and arguably, the only one that mattered.


For most of the Universe’s history, these have been the only five components that mattered. They are all present today, and they were all present — at least, we think they were all present — right from the start of the hot Big Bang. When we go back as far as we know how to go, everything is consistent with this idea.


Looking back in time, with and even beyond the limits of the Hubble Space Telescope.

The stars and galaxies we see today didn't always[+]NASA, ESA, AND A. FEILD (STSCI)

But can we go back arbitrarily far? All the way back to a singularity?


If the Universe were always filled with matter or radiation, that would be exactly what we’re able to do. We’d go back to a single point of infinite density, infinite temperature, of space having an infinitesimally small size, of a time that corresponded to “zero,” and where the laws of physics broke down. There would be no limit to how far back you could run your equations, or how far you could extrapolate this line of thinking.


But if the Universe emerged from a singular high-energy state like that, there would have been consequences for our Universe: consequences that run counter to what we actually observe. One of them is that the temperature fluctuations in the Big Bang’s leftover glow — what we see today as the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation — would have been as large as the ratio of the maximum energy achieved to the Planck scale, the latter of which is around ~1019 GeV in terms of energy. The fact that the fluctuations are much, much smaller than that, by about a factor of ~30,000, tells us that the Universe could not have been born arbitrarily hot.



The fluctuations from inflation get stretched across the Universe, creating overdensities.

In fact, from detailed measurements of both the temperature fluctuations in the cosmic microwave background and the polarization measurements of that same radiation, we can conclude that the maximum temperature the Universe achieved during the “hottest part” of the hot Big Bang was, at most, somewhere around ~1015 GeV in terms of energy. There must have been a cutoff to how far back we can extrapolate that our Universe was filled with matter-and-radiation, and instead there must have been a phase of the Universe that preceded and set up the hot Big Bang.


That phase was theorized back in the early 1980s, before these details of the cosmic microwave background were ever measured, and is known as cosmic inflation. According to the theory of inflation, the Universe:


was once dominated by a large amount of energy,

similar to dark energy, but much greater in magnitude,

that caused the Universe to expand at an exponential rate,

where it became cold and empty, except for the energy inherent to the inflationary field,

and then, at some moment, after expanding like this for an indeterminate, possibly very long or even infinite, amount of time, that inflationary field decayed,

converting almost all of that energy into matter and radiation,


which triggered and began the hot Big Bang.


Analogy of inflation persisting for a time, then ending, leading to cosmic reheating.


So, how hot did the Universe get at the hottest part of the hot Big Bang? If we can answer that question, we can learn how far back we can extrapolate the Universe we have today, and can learn what its minimum size — as close as we can get to the birth of what we know as “our Universe” — must have been. Fortunately, there’s a straightforward relationship between how “early” we go in the early Universe and how hot the Universe could have gotten in its earliest, radiation-dominated phase.


Starting from today, with our Universe that contains dark energy, dark matter, normal matter, neutrinos, and radiation, we can begin by running the clock backwards. What we'll find is that, today, the Universe is transitioning to a phase where it expands exponentially, and where distances between objects will grow without bound. But earlier, the Universe was dominated by matter, where it grew at a particular rate, and even before that, it was dominated by radiation, where it grew at still a different rate. We can even plot this out: given how much time occurred since the hot Big Bang, how large was the size of the observable Universe?


The size of the Universe (y-axis) versus the age of the Universe (x-axis) on logarithmic scales. 

The size of the Universe (y-axis) versus the age[+]E. SIEGEL


As you can see, there are a series of remarkable milestones. Today, 13.8 billion years after the Big Bang, the Universe is 46.1 billion light-years in radius — in all directions — from our vantage point. Stepping backwards:


when matter (normal and dark, combined) began dominating radiation in the Universe, the Universe was about ~10,000 years old, and about 10 million light-years in radius,

when the Universe was only about 100,000 light-years in diameter, roughly the size of the Milky Way galaxy, the Universe was only ~3 years old,

if we step back to when the Universe was ~1 year old, not only was it smaller than the Milky Way is today, but it was incredibly hot: about 2 million K, or almost hot enough to initiate nuclear fusion,

when the Universe was merely ~1 second old, it was actually too hot for nuclear fusion to occur, since any heavy nuclei created would immediately be blasted apart by an energetic collision, and the Universe would have only been about 10 light-years in any direction from you: enough to enclose just the 9 nearest known star systems to our own.

and if we went all the way back to when the Universe was merely a trillionth of a second old — 1 part in 1012 — we’d find that it was only the size of Earth’s orbit around the Sun, or 1 astronomical unit (A.U.), and that the Universe’s expansion rate at that time was a whopping 1029 times what it is right now, today.

And yet, there’s a cutoff to how far back we can go in time, which corresponds to the highest temperature the Universe could have ever reached.

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