It just seems odd the universe expands faster and faster, but will never be as slow as dS.
These things will be much easier to explain to you if you ever get around to taking a course in first semester calculus.
There seem to be two meanings of "accelerating" misconstrued here.
Misconstruing is something you're very good at.
da/dt and (da/dt)/a do mean different things. If you understood first semester calculus, and weren't so determined to avoid giving any thought to the scale factor a(t), you'd understand what those two different things mean.
The farther an object gets, the faster its velocity gets, so the farther it gets.
That sentence expresses a lot of confusion.
The farther an object
is, the faster its velocity. That fact is quantified by (da/dt)/a.
For any nonzero velocity, "the farther it gets" will be true in the direction of that velocity. That's true regardless of whether it is accelerating or decelerating or neither. Your confusion about this is highlighted by your very next sentence.
That's true in an exponentially expanding universe, which is matterlesss, that has a constant expansion rate, which has a second derivative that equals zero.
It's true in any universe that is either expanding or contracting, regardless of whether the universe contains any matter other than the object whose velocity we're discussing, regardless of whether the expansion rate is constant, and regardless of whether a second derivative equals zero.
In other words, everything you wrote in that sentence highlights your confusion.
Our universe, has matter, that pulls back on expansion.
That is true. You have denied that fact in the recent past, so it's good to see you are accepting that fact now.
The farther and object gets, the faster its velocity gets, so the farther it gets.
As I explained above, that sentence expresses a lot of confusion.
That confusion led you to the false conclusion you stated in your very next sentence.
But, thanks to gravity, not as fast as an exponentially expanding universe.
No. You got that wrong.
Had you said "thanks to gravity, not as fast as without gravity", you'd have been saying something true. But that's not what you wrote.
If you had a serious degree in computer science, you would understand the word "exponential", because you would have taken courses that discussed the difference between Θ(2
x) and other asymptotic complexity classes. But the fact that two functions f and g both belong to the class Θ(2
x) does not imply f(x) grows as fast as g(x). It means only that both f and g are asymptotically roughly proportional to the function 2
x (where the word "roughly" has a precise mathematical meaning I won't bother to state here).
Furthermore, the fact that a function f belongs to Θ(2
x) and some function g belongs to Θ(x
3) (for example) does not mean f(x) > g(x) for all x.
In the situation you're trying to understand here, there are two functions f and g, both of which are asymptotically exponential. There is a particular time t
0 at which f(t
0) > g(t
0), but the second derivative of f is negative at t
0 while the second derivative of g is
g itself times a constant.
You appear to be unable
to understand the situation described within the previous paragraph. Your inability to understand that paragraph is due to your limited understanding of mathematics at the level of asymptotic complexity and calculus. Your inability to understand that paragraph has nothing to do with cosmology or general relativity or physics, other than the fact that your inability to understand cosmology and general relativity and physics can be traced to the same limited understanding of mathematics that prevents you from understanding the previous paragraph.
But thanks to dark energy, as the matter density drops over time, it gets closer and closer to the speed of an exponentially expanding universe. Its second derivative is positive.
No.
The expansion rate H(t) drops closer and closer to the expansion rate of an exponentially expanding universe because the first derivative of H(t) is negative, and the first derivative of H(t) is negative because the second derivative of a(t) is negative.
After all, the sign of the first derivative of H(t) will always be
the same as negative when the sign of the second derivative of a(t)
is negative. If you understood calculus and were willing to understand the definition of H(t), that fact would be obvious to you. But it isn't obvious to you, because you don't understand calculus, and because you have put serious effort into failing to understand the definition of the Hubble parameter H(t).
I was under the impression that's what "accelerating" referred to. In any case, there doesn't seem to be much logical sense in a universe that is accelerating toward a slower model.
Your impressions mislead you because you don't understand calculus and you don't understand asymptotic complexity.
The most logical interpretation is that our universe will never be expanding as fast as an exponentially expanding universe.
No. You continue to get that completely backwards.
FLRW models of our universe are expanding
faster than the de Sitter models to which those models' Hubble parameter is converging. That is true now and has been true since time began. It will continue to be true for all time, because although the Hubble parameter of each FLRW model converges to the constant Hubble parameter of the corresponding de Sitter model, it will never quite equal it.
(I spoke of models in that paragraph because the FLRW and de Sitter models are mathematically precise models of which I can state mathematically precise properties.)
A car moving at a constant 55 mph is moving faster than a car that's accelerating to its top speed of 55 mph at t = infinity.
But a car moving at a constant 55 mph is moving slower than a car that's decelerating toward its eventual constant speed of 55 mph.
The analogy you chose to use encapsulates your misunderstanding of the cosmological situation.