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Could you link "The instantaneous appearance (the only physically meaningful factor) of the universe ", so I can follow how you get to this definition, please "The average velocity of the most distant matter for us, the Hubble distance, is away from us at the speed of light."If you by that mean what limit a astronomical observation, we now are observing (in time) pretty close to the big bang. Anything beyond that 'radius in time' should be empty of mass, relative us observing. That has noting to do with how big a universe is, or what mass it may consist of. If we define a universe to inflate (and expand) isotropically and homogeneous in all points, simultaneously so. Then there is no preferred point of observation, in this universe. You can stand wherever you want, look out into the universe to find the same result, as you look back in time. In fact, you must find this to be true using the stipulates from a Big Bang, inflation and expansion, otherwise you will invalidate them. And if this is true I don't see how one can define a mass of a universe, other than a educated guess over a average, whatever 'size' (distance) relative mass we would like to define. Although, the universe must be 'infinite' from those stipulations, so any definition of a real 'mass' of a 'whole universe' must then become a infinity too, although still a average relative some distance (mass density).=Please TNS, set the time-limit for us correcting spelling etc, a little more generously.