How big is space in cubic miles
Discussion
hehe...that is true..but if we work on the basis that the furthest known object we have found is the delimiter, there must be some sort of rough, back- of- the - envelope calculation that the brains on this site can come up with?
I am just curious how many digits will be attached to the power of 10
:-)
I am just curious how many digits will be attached to the power of 10
:-)
dkatwa said:
hehe...that is true..but if we work on the basis that the furthest known object we have found is the delimiter, there must be some sort of rough, back- of- the - envelope calculation that the brains on this site can come up with?
I am just curious how many digits will be attached to the power of 10
:-)
The observable universe is apparently aroundI am just curious how many digits will be attached to the power of 10
:-)
2396664370000000000000000000000000000000000000 cubic miles
Obviously nobody knows how much universe is beyond that.
dkatwa said:
...just to see the thought processes/ formulae, assumptions etc
If you mean the visible universe, I'd look up the radius of universe, (= 46 billion light years) convert to miles (x 6,000,000,000,000) and plug into the formula for volume of a sphere (4 pi r cubed).Not too hard with a scientific calculator.
Simpo Two said:
Is 'the universe' the sphere of stuff that's been expanding, or the infinite void into which it's expanding?
Ah, but is that void infinite? What if there are lots of voids? What if the void is infinite, but there are other universes in it, each also expanding? What if there is an infinite number of voids and/or universes? Greg66 said:
Simpo Two said:
the infinite void into which it's expanding?
Don't think that is quite how space works. In much the same way as one doesn't ask "is the age of the universe the period since the big bang, or do we count the time before the big bag too?"Simpo Two said:
Is 'the universe' the sphere of stuff that's been expanding, or the infinite void into which it's expanding?
It's only expanding if you're inside it. If you could somehow be outside then its never changed at all. It's also only 14 billion years old if you're inside, outside then it may have only just come into being. This is because of the properties of physics only applies to this universe, if there's an elsewhere they'll have their own properties. qube_TA said:
Simpo Two said:
Is 'the universe' the sphere of stuff that's been expanding, or the infinite void into which it's expanding?
It's only expanding if you're inside it. If you could somehow be outside then its never changed at all.Nimby said:
dkatwa said:
...just to see the thought processes/ formulae, assumptions etc
If you mean the visible universe, I'd look up the radius of universe, (= 46 billion light years) convert to miles (x 6,000,000,000,000) and plug into the formula for volume of a sphere (4 pi r cubed).Not too hard with a scientific calculator.
ash73 said:
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Not a good starting assumption!My working out would be for the visible universe as above, so take the radius of a sphere to be the distance to the visible limit, then calculate the volume of that sphere. It's a big number, but almost certainly nowhere near the true size of the universe (infinite or not).
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