How can the universe be 93 billion light years across in size, if it is only 13.7 billion years old?
1 Answer
Oct 9, 2016
See explanation
Explanation:
I am not answering your question. There might be quite many
Socratics who could answer, with facts and figures.
This is just to give my inference, from the two mismatching data.
93/2 = 46.5 is nearly 3.37 X 13.77. This means that, beyond Milky
Way, our universe is extant for 2.37 X 13.77 billion light years more.
The point of reference here is the Big Bang center.. .