twice as fast
9/28/2011 2:26:42 PM
I don't think I've ever seen the universe depicted as flat. Expanding cones, balloons, etc, yeah, but it is assumed to be infinite in all directions. Thus the gravity from all shit to the right for infinity is cancelled by all the gravityfrom the shit to the left... you only need to look at local gravitational influences, since in an infinite universe, there are so many galaxies randomly dispersed that it is considered homogeneous.[Edited on September 28, 2011 at 5:05 PM. Reason : .]
9/28/2011 5:04:35 PM
^galaxies aren't randomly distributed. There are groups and then clusters and superclusters of galaxies.(example)[Edited on September 28, 2011 at 5:25 PM. Reason : ]
9/28/2011 5:24:29 PM
Locally, you are correct. Over infinite distance, the clusters approximate out to random homogeneous distributions.[Edited on September 28, 2011 at 5:32 PM. Reason : actually i shouldnt say approximate... it IS a random homogeneous distribution over inf distance]
9/28/2011 5:30:29 PM
if you are talking about infinite distance, then the all of the matter in the universe would resemble a single point in the center of an infinite expanse of nothingness.
9/28/2011 5:34:37 PM
Not quite... when calculating gravitational influences, if one were to mark a center of an object, all matter outside of a given radius (assuming uniform spherical distribution) has no net gravitational impact. For this reason, the vast majority of matter in the universe can be ignored, as it is an infinite sphere with infinite matter.All matter inside of that radius has a net gravitation attraction, though. Which can be represented a a sum of the mass acting from the center of mass on said chosen body.Feel free to argue with hawking on the issue, if it troubles you, iirc he discusses it in some detail in one of his books.It's pretty widely accepted that we can ignore all the shit we can't see, as a result.Then theres the argument that if it's infinite, any one point can be chosen as the center of mass, since the universe extends infinitely in all directions from this point.[Edited on September 28, 2011 at 6:09 PM. Reason : .][Edited on September 28, 2011 at 6:11 PM. Reason : .][Edited on September 28, 2011 at 6:14 PM. Reason : nd if im doing shitty job explining, its my birthdy and im drunk ]
9/28/2011 6:06:34 PM
happy birthday.i've read hawking's pop stuff too.and our observable universe (a sphere with a radius of ~14 billion light years) would be the only thing that matters when calculating gravitational stuff (since gravity moves at the speed of light)[Edited on September 28, 2011 at 7:45 PM. Reason : ]
9/28/2011 7:43:16 PM
Also correct. But that's to us. An object 14 billion ly away sees quite a different universe. It has a different 14 Gly bubble.
9/28/2011 8:53:06 PM
this isnt really a big deal.taco bell and/or white chocolate breaks the speed of light through my innards.
9/28/2011 8:57:53 PM
9/28/2011 9:35:30 PM
But you left infinity out of that equation. Look at clusters by putting pennies spaced some distance apart... the more you repeat the random dispersion, and the further out you go, its close enough to a uniform distribution. As you approach infinity, it becomes uniform./as taught by a prof who was an astrophysicist
9/28/2011 9:41:38 PM
ha, yeah, I realized that about 10 seconds after I posted.
9/28/2011 9:58:43 PM
Sometimes I wish I had grown up to be an Astrophysicist. Then I come here and read through discussions like this one and I'm very glad I'm not. My brain would have exploded long ago.
9/29/2011 7:20:59 AM
but there is not infinite mass in the universe.
9/29/2011 7:21:27 AM
if the universe were on a treadmill would it take off?
9/29/2011 1:54:48 PM
if we never talked about the universe again, would it exist?
9/29/2011 2:13:07 PM
When I said flat I wasn't referring to shape, but curvature. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shape_of_the_UniverseI don't fully understand it (who the hell does) but the bottom line is you ain't looping around from one side to another by getting to the edge (if that was even possible).Spacially, it's most likely spheroid in shape like you'd expect.
9/29/2011 2:42:31 PM
An old astrophysicist joke:If i'm sitting on a plane, and someone asks me what i do for a living... if I want to have a conversation, I say i'm an astronomer. if i dont, I say i'm a physicist.--I did some astrophysics research under a professor my freshman year. It was cool shit, I like thinking about it, and talking about it. But it got to a point where I wasn't sure I could continue doing the classes to get a PhD in physics.. quantum was too hard. I think I have the discipline now, but frankly I'd rather be an engineer and design and build shit on these massive experiments, like the lhc, etc./cool story bro
9/29/2011 6:48:29 PM
^ I had a similar experience - did a really cool study program in radio astronomy at the NRO in Green Bank, WV under some big name guys from UNC. I really enjoyed it, but the thought of getting into quantum and all that mess was much less appealing than mechanical engineering, and as you said, getting to design and build the cool machines sounded much better than analyzing their data.[Edited on September 29, 2011 at 7:31 PM. Reason : ]
9/29/2011 7:29:48 PM
9/29/2011 7:49:37 PM
10/1/2011 12:17:28 AM
man i came to check to see if anyone had eaten their boxer shorts on live television, but you dorks are just conjecturing on tangentially-relevant shit
10/1/2011 8:58:36 PM
YEEEEEP!
10/1/2011 10:29:46 PM
10/1/2011 11:34:17 PM
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/09/110929144645.htm
10/2/2011 9:27:05 PM
http://youtu.be/0Tqdc6x7sZY
10/3/2011 10:52:24 AM
10/3/2011 11:18:59 AM
my point was not that the universe is actually configured like that... my point was that it IF the universe had infinite space (as you seem to be saying), then that might be what it would look like since there is definitely NOT infinite mass. and every image of our observable universe shows a definite structure of the universe, and there is no evidence to suggest that this is a fluke, and therefore matter is NOT scattered at random like you attest.
10/3/2011 11:29:21 AM
Observable <<< infinity
10/3/2011 11:34:36 AM
durr
10/3/2011 11:56:37 AM
^^^ It's preposterous to think of a universe with infinite space and finite mass. Infinite mass follows with infinite space. It's the mass density that's constant over large scales. An infinite universe is still a possibility that no one can mange to disprove (believe me, I would love to rule it out, I hate the idea, but I can't). Such an infinite universe would entail infinite mass.
10/3/2011 1:19:22 PM
10/3/2011 4:15:31 PM
What would be the implications if we found out the universe really did extend to infinity in all directions?
10/3/2011 5:30:34 PM
10/3/2011 5:44:09 PM
10/3/2011 6:02:31 PM
is there a finite # of galaxies that a photon emitted from Earth, today, could potentially reach until the end of the universe?
10/3/2011 6:54:33 PM
If you know the date the universe ends, then yes.Otherwise, time is infinite
10/3/2011 7:10:23 PM
ok, good. at least I know what you're claiming.Now, given the following:- "dark-energy" exists, meaning that all galaxies (aside from the nearby ones) are accelerating away from us- according to general relativity, when ( acceleration x distance ) is greater than a certain critical value, an event horizon is formedThese two things imply that anything on this Earth today is fundamentally physically limited in terms of the furthest galaxy it could ever reach. In fact, there exists a solar system somewhere that the photons emitted from Earth today can reach, but the photons we emit tomorrow can not reach.Every second there are countless worlds slipping out of our maximum field of reachability. Every day another star falls out the edge of the universe. For Baryonic matter like us, the furthest extent of what we may ever practically reach is much more limited.You seem to disagree. Now, there are plenty of avenues to do so. The nature of dark energy remains fairly elusive. It could just cut off in another billion years. We don't know. We don't have a theory that sufficiently explains dark energy.
10/3/2011 8:29:25 PM
10/3/2011 8:46:07 PM
Concept of infinity is grossly misunderstood itt
10/3/2011 9:01:01 PM
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v319/n6056/abs/319751a0.html"Large-scale homogeneity of the Universe measured by the microwave background"basically, this paper states that the universe is measured to have homogeneous distribution at scales on order of 100 million light years.Pretty huge, but on the scale of infinity, it's really small. Regardless of how big your superclusters are, infinity is still bigger.
10/3/2011 9:10:00 PM
of course infinity is bigger, however the universe is not infinite.
10/4/2011 10:33:59 AM
and the background microwave radiation came from a time when the universe was undergoing the big bang and was a LOT different. This image is about a billion light years across and the mass is definitely NOT homogeneous:
10/4/2011 10:36:31 AM
10/4/2011 11:06:30 AM
^No, it was never intended to be. Its fact... its background information..^^You keep trying to apply smaller scales to objects than are even being talked about. That image, if you broke it into pixels 100 million ly across, and measured the mass, it would be homogeneous. If I wanted to apply a scale of 20cm to it, it's OBVIOUSLY not homogeneous. i give up, you're reasonably intellegent, but there's no getting through to you. [Edited on October 4, 2011 at 12:25 PM. Reason : .]
10/4/2011 12:19:39 PM
Boy, I sure am glad the universe is not homogenous on the scale of a human!
10/4/2011 2:34:35 PM
10/4/2011 3:22:10 PM
gravity.[Edited on October 4, 2011 at 3:26 PM. Reason : its structured, but randomly structured... and is homogeneous over scale > 100 Mly]
10/4/2011 3:25:17 PM
Well, I figured that much. Same would go for galaxies, solar systems, stars, and planets, no?But Smath74 seems to be implying a non random distribution.
10/4/2011 3:56:20 PM
10/4/2011 5:59:51 PM