|
|
|
Go 
|
Post 
|
Find 
|
Notify 
|
|
Reply 
|
|
Admin 
|
New PM! 
|
Platinum Enthusiast
|
GerryHere is a very good site that answers questions on cosmology. Take a look at the two questions (listed at the top of the page), "If the Universe is only 10 billion years old, how can we see objects that are now 30 billion light years away?" and "Where was the center of the Big Bang?" Perhaps these will help. http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmology_faq.html#MX
|
| |
| Posts: 1540 | Location: Minneapolis | Registered: 06-08-02 |    |
|
Silver Enthusiast

|
In the Beginning, say 13 billion years ago, all of space and energy were bundled in a tiny ball of infinetesimal size. There was no Time, just energy occupying zero-space. For clarity, I will assume the size of the Universe at this point to be the size of a party balloon, since it is difficult to talk about 'zero' anything. All of space and energy as we know it occupies the surface of the balloon, again, for clarity, using a curved 2-dimensional analogy for the universe. (Forget what lies inside the balloon, that's another topic). Then, suddenly, in a fraction of a fraction of a micro-second.....BANG.....Time begins, and the Universe starts its expansion outward into the Nothingness. The rate of this expansion is unclear: is at lightspeed, 3 times lightspeed, 1000000 times lightspeed, or less than lightspeed? The rate of expansion of space-time need not necessarily follow Relativity principles. But the speed of light MUST. If the expansion rate is less than c, the light from the "Bang" cannot escape into the nothingness, that is, it cannot penetrate the space-time 'wall' because it is confined by gravity (space-time curvature) to forever stay within the space-time limits of the universe (somewhat similar to light not being able to escape a black hole). And so rhe light must encircle the universe, whose size at this point is that of a balloon, and the Big Bang, and light from same, is everywhere in the universe, no central point, just thinned out energy and light occupying space thinned by the expansion. As the 'balloon' size universe expands more and more, the light goes with it for the ride, also the energy, and ultimately, say a billion years later, small infant galaxies begin to form EVERYWHER in this 'infant' universe. In the meantime as these galaxies are forming, the original light from the 'Bang' is still moving out to the reaches of the expanded universe. Ultimately, 13 billion later, we find ourselves on the Third Planet from the Sun in the Milky way Galaxy, and as we look out 12 billion light years into space, we see the distant galaxies in their early formation, just as they, now, see galaxies in our region in their infant stages.
What do you think??
|
| |
| Posts: 625 | Location: Boston | Registered: 06-13-02 |    |
|
 | Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
© 2002-2008 AnswerPool.com
Visit DiscussionPool.com! |