A random thought occurred to me, I have no clue what the answer is, but would this expansion happen at close to the speed of light? Would those rules even exist at that point of the Universe' life? I've read before that some constants may not be as 'constant' in deep time as we think.
Battuta is right: the expansion, especially during the Inflationary Epoch, is much, much faster. But the speed of light, c, as far as we can tell, is a constant.
This sounds like a gross violation of special relativity, but it isn't. The motion of material or signals through space is not the same as the motion due to the expansion of space, and this difference is very commonly misunderstood, even among cosmologists. I like to use the classic balloon analogy here, with some further elaboration to help explain the difference.
Imagine a 2D analogue to the 3D universe as the surface of a balloon, with dots drawn on it to represent galaxy clusters. Measure the distance between these dots by wrapping a tape measure across the surface. Now inflate the balloon. The distance between any two dots increases with time due to the expansion, and the more distant the dots are, the faster they are separated. This is Hubble's Law: the rate at which two things (assuming they are not close enough to be bound by gravity or other forces) move apart is directly proportional to the distance between them. And it doesn't matter which dot you measure from, you will always see the same behavior, as if you are always at the center of expansion. This is a natural outcome of a uniformly expanding space, or what we call
metric expansion.
I'm sure most people have heard this analogy already, but now let's look a little deeper:
Imagine that there are two ants on the balloon, at two different dots. One ant tries to crawl over to the other while the balloon expands. Does he ever make it over to his friend?
If the balloon is expanding too rapidly, or if they started out too widely separated, then he never makes it. He gets dragged farther away by the expansion even as he crawls in the right direction. The analogy is that the moving ant is a photon, crawling at the speed of light, while the stationary ant is an observer. If the two began too widely separated, the photon never reaches the observer. It is as if the galaxy it originated from is receding faster than the speed of light.
This doesn't violate special relativity because the galaxy isn't "really" moving -- it's just being dragged along with the expansion of space. Or, equivalently, the space between them is expanding faster than a photon can cover the distance. There is no limitation on how fast this can happen, because there is no limitation on how rapidly space can expand. The expansion of space is described by general relativity, and depends on the amount of matter and energy it contains.
In the real universe there are galaxies that will
never be observed because their light cannot reach us, just as if they are beyond an event horizon. The comparison to black holes is apt -- relativity is not violated by things falling into black holes either. Any superluminal behavior due to the movement of inertial reference frames toward the singularity is blocked from view by an event horizon, much as any superluminal behavior of galaxies due to the expansion of the universe is behind an event horizon.