... invert Max Planck`s shortest measurement of light, now you have the longest measurable distance of light 10^22 light years. ...
You have written that a few times. What does it mean to "invert Max Planck`s shortest measurement of light"? I assume you are referring to a Planck length, 1.6x10
-35 m. If you invert that value, you get 6.19x10
34 m
-1, which is not 10
22 light-years. It's not even a distance value because the units are inverted, too.
It is 10 to the power of 22 light years brother, That is the longest measurable distance of light, when you invert the shortest.
You didn't answer my question. How about showing some math? You can't invert a distance without inverting the units, and then it is no longer a distance.
Also, if you have a distance of 1 mm and you "invert" it, you get 1, right? But if you have the same distance of 10
-3 meters and you "invert" that, you get 1000. The results are different even though they are the same distance. Can you explain how your inversion is done?