>ITT: /sci/ comes up with a way to measure the real volume (excluding inflation) of the Universe
>>7783026
>the real volume (excluding inflation)
What does that mean?
>>7783026
put it in a body of water
measure displaced volume.
this is middle school physics bruh
>>7783037
The actual volume/size of the universe, as it was pre-inflation. I'm not talking about "it was smaller than an atom!", I'm talking about some way to measure it relatively to something that isn't affected by inflation; a constant.
After that you can determine and possibly predict the rate of inflation. When you find that inflation variable, you can also determine the exact limit of the speed of light, for an example, since what we currently have as C is scaled up as space inflated.
>>7783026
fart in its general direction then count the seconds till your dog walks in
>>7783026
Triple integral
>>7783083
Infinite volume.
>>7783083
>When you find that inflation variable, you can also determine the exact limit of the speed of light, for an example, since what we currently have as C is scaled up as space inflated.
>>7783026
>asks the impossibe
>injects pseudoscience
>expects realistic answer
/thread
<- This is you.