The universe is much bigger than previously thought
Discussion
According to a recent British-led study, there's at least two trillion galaxies in the observable universe. This is 20 times larger than previously thought.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
Beati Dogu said:
According to a recent British-led study, there's at least two trillion galaxies in the observable universe. This is 20 times larger than previously thought.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
Does that mean "bigger" or just "more crowded"?http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
Eric Mc said:
Beati Dogu said:
According to a recent British-led study, there's at least two trillion galaxies in the observable universe. This is 20 times larger than previously thought.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
Does that mean "bigger" or just "more crowded"?http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
deckster said:
Eric Mc said:
Beati Dogu said:
According to a recent British-led study, there's at least two trillion galaxies in the observable universe. This is 20 times larger than previously thought.
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
Does that mean "bigger" or just "more crowded"?http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-an...
Einion Yrth said:
I offer this only as information, but Mike McCulloch offers some alternative thoughts wrt the "missing mass" problem. Worth a look, and I certainly don't dismiss it out of hand, because the maths seem to work.
Really interesting link, had a good few hours reading up and not understanding much of it! It does seem to tick a few of the boxes in terms of inertia, quantum gravity, dark matter and intuitively makes a bit more sense of things I think. Cheers.Danattheopticians said:
It's endless. So how can it mean bigger?
Can only mean somone who's had the time to count to a number ending in illion had too much time on their hands.
Consider the surface of a ball. Is it endless? Now compare the surface area of a small ball to a large ball. Still endless, but bigger.Can only mean somone who's had the time to count to a number ending in illion had too much time on their hands.
Now extrapolate the two-dimensional ball surface to three dimensions...
i listened to someone explaining the ball thing recently and, for the first time, "infinite" made sense.
space is infinite but boundaried. like an ant walking around the earth - 1 minor deviation from course will mean an entirely new pathway and it'll never get back to it's staring point.
paul
space is infinite but boundaried. like an ant walking around the earth - 1 minor deviation from course will mean an entirely new pathway and it'll never get back to it's staring point.
paul
But if an ant could trace it's path behind him as wide as him and walk far enough and for long enough it could after an amount of time (Not actually infinite but for argument sake infinate) that line he left would eventually cover the entire surface. Like a marker pen on a football only scale football up and pen down. So the5 surface of a ball is finite. No proof however that space is. Neither is there proof that space is spherical, but I'd agree it likely that the matter which make up all of the stars, galaxies etc is finite however the space into which the universe's known matter is expanding into is endless otherwise what is beyond that?
Danattheopticians said:
But if an ant could trace it's path behind him as wide as him and walk far enough and for long enough it could after an amount of time (Not actually infinite but for argument sake infinate) that line he left would eventually cover the entire surface. Like a marker pen on a football only scale football up and pen down. So the5 surface of a ball is finite. No proof however that space is. Neither is there proof that space is spherical, but I'd agree it likely that the matter which make up all of the stars, galaxies etc is finite however the space into which the universe's known matter is expanding into is endless otherwise what is beyond that?
An ant walking on the surface of the earth might also think "there's no proof that this seemingly infinite plane that I'm walking on is in fact finite".The thing about "what is space expanding into" has to be cast aside. Again, what is the surface of the ball expanding into? It's not expanding into anything, in terms of its expansion - it's just expanding.
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