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I am a strong believer of the multiverse. Energy has to be infinite, otherwise there would be nothing. Finite energy in the hole world makes no sense. Energy is eternal, it has no start or end, it can not be destroyed or created. Therefore there has to be an infinite number of universes like ours. And to understand how the universe works, we have to look at the two probably most important but opposite states of energy there is: light (or electromagnetic waves) and black holes.
Light is the “highest” state and smallest mass of energy. It travels with the speed of light, as we know the highest speed anything can reach. In its form it has no mass, and time does not exist for it. So: speed=c, mass=0, time=0.
Black hole is the “lowest” state and biggest mass of energy. The speed of the energy in the black hole is close to 0. Time is close to infinite (compared to its surroundings) , that is why all its particles can be at the centre at the same time (they have almost infinite time to swap places). Its mass is variable. So: speed: close to 0, mass: x, time: close to infinite.
If the multiverse theory is true, the black holes from multiple universes could merge, they could  grow to an unimaginable huge mass. But there has to be a limit of this mass.  If a supermassive black hole reaches this critical mass then it can not hold its energy any more and blows up. This could be the source of the big bang.
So my question would be: what could this critical mass be? The mass of our universe? Is it possible to calculate this maximum mass? Is that anything to do with the speed of light? If we could calculate this and prove it, it would be a huge breakthrough in science and it would prove the infinite multiverse and that energy is infinite.
 

Posted
1 hour ago, László Hajós said:

I am a strong believer of the multiverse. Energy has to be infinite, otherwise there would be nothing. Finite energy in the hole world makes no sense. Energy is eternal, it has no start or end, it can not be destroyed or created. Therefore there has to be an infinite number of universes like ours. And to understand how the universe works, we have to look at the two probably most important but opposite states of energy there is: light (or electromagnetic waves) and black holes.
Light is the “highest” state and smallest mass of energy. It travels with the speed of light, as we know the highest speed anything can reach. In its form it has no mass, and time does not exist for it. So: speed=c, mass=0, time=0.
Black hole is the “lowest” state and biggest mass of energy. The speed of the energy in the black hole is close to 0. Time is close to infinite (compared to its surroundings) , that is why all its particles can be at the centre at the same time (they have almost infinite time to swap places). Its mass is variable. So: speed: close to 0, mass: x, time: close to infinite.
If the multiverse theory is true, the black holes from multiple universes could merge, they could  grow to an unimaginable huge mass. But there has to be a limit of this mass.  If a supermassive black hole reaches this critical mass then it can not hold its energy any more and blows up. This could be the source of the big bang.
So my question would be: what could this critical mass be? The mass of our universe? Is it possible to calculate this maximum mass? Is that anything to do with the speed of light? If we could calculate this and prove it, it would be a huge breakthrough in science and it would prove the infinite multiverse and that energy is infinite.
 

As yet we have absolutely no evidence of any multiverse scenario, none.

Theoretically speaking The only limit to the mass of a BH is the mass/energy within the universe....practicaly and realistically speaking that of course would never happen, so the mass of any BH is only governed by the amount of mass that it can swallow.

Posted (edited)
7 hours ago, László Hajós said:

I am a strong believer of the multiverse. Energy has to be infinite, otherwise there would be nothing. Finite energy in the hole world makes no sense.

Belief or “making sense" has no place in science. We don't know if the universe is finite or infinite; the evidence is consistent with either. And we have no evidence for multiverses.

7 hours ago, László Hajós said:

Light is the “highest” state and smallest mass of energy.

This is meaningless.

7 hours ago, László Hajós said:

Black hole is the “lowest” state and biggest mass of energy. The speed of the energy in the black hole is close to 0.

This is meaningless

7 hours ago, László Hajós said:

If the multiverse theory is true, the black holes from multiple universes could merge

In every multiverse theory that I am familiar with, the universes are causally separated from one another. So the black holes could never merge.

Do you have a reference that says they can?

7 hours ago, László Hajós said:

But there has to be a limit of this mass.  If a supermassive black hole reaches this critical mass then it can not hold its energy any more and blows up.

There is no theoretical upper mass for a black hole. Also, the expanding universe (Big Bang model) does not resemble an explosion.

 

Edited by Strange

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