Why is the gravity so weak in the universe?
The universe is a singularity – an infinitesimally small dimensionless point. Within our singularity universe there are really only two things, static matter and continuously expanding time and space. Also within the singularity is energy (E), which is the static matter (m) directly conflicting with the continuously expanding time and space (c) at the subatomic level and this interaction is expressed as E=mc^2. Gravity is the manifestation of continuously expanding time and space curving around the static matter in the universe and we experience this as an acceleration. Gravity is not so much an interaction between matter (m) and time and space (c), but merely (c) itself unable to expand or proceed due the presence of the (m) getting in its way. Where (c) and (m) actually interact, the forces are much more robust, it makes energy (E). As (c) continuously expands, the static (m) becomes more and more diffuse within the universe; the quantity of gravity stays the same, but continuously e