General Relativity permits distortions in
spacetime that allow an object to move faster than light from the point of view of a distant observer.
General relativity also agrees that any technique for faster-than-light
travel could also be used for
time travel. The expansion of the
universe causes distant galaxies to recede from us faster than the speed of light,in
general relativity, velocity is a local notion, so velocity calculated using comoving coordinates does not have any simple relation to velocity calculated locally. Rules that apply to relative velocities in special relativity, such as the rule that relative velocities cannot increase past the speed of light, do not apply to relative velocities in comoving coordinates, which are often described in terms of the "expansion of space" between galaxies. This expansion rate is thought to have been at its peak during the
inflationary epoch thought to have occurred in a tiny fraction of the second after the
Big Bang (models suggest the period would have been from around 10^36 seconds after the Big Bang to around 10^33 seconds), when the universe may have rapidly expanded by a factor of around 10^20 to 10^30.