All parts of our Universe our exactly the same age. There is no "inside" and no "outside" -- all parts of our Universe came into being at exactly the same amount, and no part is closer to an edge than another.
That part of our Universe that we on our planet can see -- what we called the "visible Universe" -- does have this feature: the farther an object is from us, the farther back in time is what we are seeing. For example, if we view an object one billion light years from us, we are seeing what was occuring there one billion years ago; for an object two billion light years from us, what we are seeing occurred two billion years ago.
No, this would be a logical contradiction.
The universe is older
Slightly younger than the universe.
I dont believe anyone knows the conditions outside the universe
The outside is different than the outside, and they are curious.
The chloride concentration is higher outside the cell than inside the cell.
inside their is clean than outside.
The concentration of material is greater on the outside of the cell than the inside in a hypertonic solution. In this solution, there is a higher concentration of solutes outside the cell compared to inside, causing water to move out of the cell, leading to cell shrinkage.
Bigger inside than appears outside
Impossible, as the universe is expanding at the speed of light. By the time you got to the edge of the universe, the edge will have moved at least as far away from you as you originally started from. Let's say that the fastest I can move is 60 mph. I want to catch a car that's travelling away from me at 60 mph. The only thing I can do is to stop the distance between me and the car from going greater -- I can never catch up. Nothing in the Universe can travel outside the Universe according to what we currently know about physics.
I Think Yes?
Outside skirt steak is tougher than inside skirt steak.