The Dirac large numbers hypothesis uses the ratio of the size of the 
visible universe to the radius of quantum particle to predict the age of
 the universe. 
The coincidence of various ratios being close in order of magnitude may ultimately prove meaningless or the indication of a deeper connection between concepts in a future theory of everything. Nevertheless, attempts to use such ideas have been criticized as numerology.
The Dirac large numbers hypothesis (LNH) is an observation made by Paul Dirac in 1937 relating ratios of size scales in the Universe to that of force scales. The ratios constitute very large, dimensionless numbers: some 40 orders of magnitude
 in the present cosmological epoch. According to Dirac's hypothesis, the
 apparent equivalence of these ratios might not be a mere coincidence 
but instead could imply a cosmology with these unusual features:
- The strength of gravity, as represented by the gravitational constant, is inversely proportional to the age of the universe: 
- The mass of the universe is proportional to the square of the universe's age: . 
Neither of these two features has gained wide acceptance in mainstream physics and, though some proponents of non-standard cosmologies refer to Dirac's cosmology as a foundational basis for their own ideas and studies, some physicists
 dismiss the large numbers in LNH as mere coincidences.
A coincidence, 
however, may be defined optimally as 'an event that provides support for
 an alternative to a currently favoured causal theory, but not 
necessarily enough support to accept that alternative in light of its 
low prior probability.' 
Research into LNH, or the large number of coincidences that underpin 
it, appears to have gained new impetus from failures in standard 
cosmology to account for anomalies such as the recent discovery that the
 universe might be expanding at an accelerated rate.
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