Message boards :
Science (non-SETI) :
New galaxy 'most distant' yet discovered
Message board moderation
Author | Message |
---|---|
Lynn Send message Joined: 20 Nov 00 Posts: 14162 Credit: 79,603,650 RAC: 123 |
Because it takes light so long to travel from the outer edge of the Universe to us, the galaxy appears as it was 13.1 billion years ago (its distance from Earth of 30 billion light-years is because the Universe is expanding). Impressive! http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-24637890 |
Wiggo Send message Joined: 24 Jan 00 Posts: 36731 Credit: 261,360,520 RAC: 489 |
Now if we can only work out how to fold space/time and punch through it. Cheers. |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
|
Sarge Send message Joined: 25 Aug 99 Posts: 12273 Credit: 8,569,109 RAC: 79 |
Or be able to pass through a wormhole... I like to keep my mind open to these possibilities, as well as open to the idea a Nigerian prince e-mailed me with a monetary opportunity. :) [How's my Ozz imitation? :)] |
OzzFan Send message Joined: 9 Apr 02 Posts: 15691 Credit: 84,761,841 RAC: 28 |
If you, too, are trying to suggest non-sequitur logic is being used in the non-rational thinking, then I think you're doing a great job! ;) |
skildude Send message Joined: 4 Oct 00 Posts: 9541 Credit: 50,759,529 RAC: 60 |
I liked stargate but they canceled it In a rich man's house there is no place to spit but his face. Diogenes Of Sinope |
Sarge Send message Joined: 25 Aug 99 Posts: 12273 Credit: 8,569,109 RAC: 79 |
If you, too, are trying to suggest non-sequitur logic is being used in the non-rational thinking, then I think you're doing a great job! ;) Put it this way: we know wormholes are theoretically possible. If we somehow can open one and safely travel one, great. Which opens the doors to all those discussions about aliens, ancient or not. In the meantime, we have not one shred of evidence that wormholes actually exist, let alone that we can open one and travel through one. So, for now, it's wishful thinking. And, for me, I do watch "Ancient Aliens", because it's better than something like "Honey Boo Boo" or "The Voice." One thing one of their guest had, I think, correct is (for whatever reason): we have amnesia. What happened in the time from being able to speak until we could also write and record thoughts and history? |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
|
skildude Send message Joined: 4 Oct 00 Posts: 9541 Credit: 50,759,529 RAC: 60 |
If you, too, are trying to suggest non-sequitur logic is being used in the non-rational thinking, then I think you're doing a great job! ;) from what little I've read on wormholes, they'd be infinitely small. So you'd have to have technology to breakdown a person to fit into one then rebuild them as they left it. Much like the transporters in Star Trek In a rich man's house there is no place to spit but his face. Diogenes Of Sinope |
Sarge Send message Joined: 25 Aug 99 Posts: 12273 Credit: 8,569,109 RAC: 79 |
What happened in the time from being able to speak until we could also write and record thoughts and history? Hard to swallow. Speaking. Tens of thousands of years making cave drawings. Then ... BAM!!! Monoliths & megaliths? Nothing between? |
cov_route Send message Joined: 13 Sep 12 Posts: 342 Credit: 10,270,618 RAC: 0 |
Because it takes light so long to travel from the outer edge of the Universe to us, the galaxy appears as it was 13.1 billion years ago (its distance from Earth of 30 billion light-years is because the Universe is expanding). As a non-astrophysicist this is one of the things that nags at me...at what time was/is it 13.1 or 30 billion LY away? At the big bang everything was at the same point in space? I think? So...an instant thereafter the location in space where this galaxy is now was not 30 billion LY away from our location, it was one angstrom away from "us". Then...due to inflation, things expanded much faster than the speed of light and that location moved, I don't know, light years away in less than a second. Then stuff happened, the universe became transparent, this other galaxy formed and emitted some light but *at that time* it was not 13.1 GLY away, right? I think? But due to the expansion of space itself the light emitted traveled toward us at *less* than the speed of light so it took 13.1 billion years to get here. So when it emitted the light we just observed it was less than 13.1 billion LY away and now it is more than that away, in fact it has traveled away at superluminal relative speeds due to the expansion of space and now is forever invisible to us because it's over the "horizon". |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
|
ML1 Send message Joined: 25 Nov 01 Posts: 21189 Credit: 7,508,002 RAC: 20 |
"horizon". As in some of the light emitted during the period of cosmic faster-than-light inflation is only now catching up with where we are now... Strange pan-dimensional stuff... Keep searchin', Martin See new freedom: Mageia Linux Take a look for yourself: Linux Format The Future is what We all make IT (GPLv3) |
cov_route Send message Joined: 13 Sep 12 Posts: 342 Credit: 10,270,618 RAC: 0 |
And that would be the cosmic microwave background radiation then? Not exactly. Have you ever noticed that the Hubble constant is just one number? There's no relativistic properties attached to it? That's something that's never emphasized when you learn about it, there is nothing stopping space from moving away from us at greater than the speed of light, just multiply H by a big enough distance and you get it. So what i mean by "over the horizon" is that something has moved far enough away from us that it is traveling away (or more correctly, space between it and us is expanding) at more than c. So it's light can no longer ever reach us. It's in part of the universe that is lost to observation. We have no idea if that part of the universe is small, big, or infinite. |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
|
William Rothamel Send message Joined: 25 Oct 06 Posts: 3756 Credit: 1,999,735 RAC: 4 |
That's where dark energy comes in but that's only a hypothetical form of energy... If in fact the expansion is increasing in speed then the "Dark Energy" would be akin to a negative gravity. Don't forget that when we say that far away galaxies are moving at faster and faster speeds we are looking at conditions perhaps 13 billion years ago. (Red shift greater than 7). Back then I expect that gravity had not yet had enough time to catch up to the pressure of the big bang and so you would expect high expansion rates. Can anyone reconcile this idea with what we say is happening now ala dark energy. |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
Found quite an interesting article. http://www.physicsoftheuniverse.com/topics_bigbang_accelerating.html rOZZ Music Pictures |
Lynn Send message Joined: 20 Nov 00 Posts: 14162 Credit: 79,603,650 RAC: 123 |
Found quite an interesting article. Thanks for the read, Julie. The universe wastes nothing, it's simply transferred. |
Julie Send message Joined: 28 Oct 09 Posts: 34060 Credit: 18,883,157 RAC: 18 |
|
W-K 666 Send message Joined: 18 May 99 Posts: 19393 Credit: 40,757,560 RAC: 67 |
I put this here cause it the closest thread to the subject. Galaxy Trio Discovered Caught Merging Near 'Cosmic Dawn' |
©2024 University of California
SETI@home and Astropulse are funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and donations from SETI@home volunteers. AstroPulse is funded in part by the NSF through grant AST-0307956.