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Space Science

Theory-Affirming Evidence About the Universe 542

Bill Kendrick writes "Astronomers using a radio telescope at the South Pole have recorded a flicker of light from nearly 14 billion years ago that verifies most modern theory about the cosmos. Way back then, light and matter were only just beginning to separate from each other."
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Theory-Affirming Evidence About the Universe

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  • by rjw57 ( 532004 ) <richwareham@nOSPaM.users.sourceforge.net> on Friday September 20, 2002 @05:29AM (#4295853) Homepage Journal
    Everyone knows the Universe is only 4000 years old :)
    • 6000... seriously, read the bible.

      i always found it incredibly funny that my pastor would blame everything on "pre-flood" times where the earth was surrounded by water. i'm sure he would say this light was somehow affected in its transmission through the old water barrier and thus it proves that the world is 6000 years old.

      "what about carbon dating?" the pressure from the flood of course

      "evolution?" days wasted here, pointless... if we evolved why are there still monkeys?

      either way, i've disassociated myself from the church... bullheaded morons. that is why i spend all my time on slashdot where i can be free from that. [/sarcasm]
      • by Brian_Ellenberger ( 308720 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @10:05AM (#4296799)
        Nowhere in the Bible does it mention the Earth's age. Sure some Jews/Christians believe it was only 6000 years, but there are plenty of others (like myself) who believe in the Bible and still believe the earth is quite a bit older.

        Anyway when I read this:
        "when matter and light were only just beginning to separate from one another."

        I thought of this:
        Genesis 1:3 And God said, "Let there be light"; and there was light. 4 And God saw that the light was good; and God separated the light from the darkness.

        I believe Genesis was inspired by God, but written though a person. I think the author of Genesis did a pretty good job trying to find words and descriptions for what they were shown.

        Saved By Grace,
        Brian Ellenberger
        • The Bible is no more accurate than any other world creation myth.

          Heck, the two creation myths in the Bible don't even match up with each other, much less with what actually happened.
        • If you assume that a "day" really means "day" in the Bible for the first 7 days (and why wouldn't you?) and then add up all the ages of the people listed from generation to generation, you get a fairly conclusive age for the universe according to the Bible. (I don't know if off the top of my head, but I know it's there) Now, you could argue that a the first 7 days in the Bible are actually billions of years long. But then if you start saying that words in the Bible mean different things than what we normally attribute words for, then you're allowing yourself to make up whatever you want to believe in and interpret the Bible however you want.

          • What about Lamech, who in different chapters is the descendant of either Cain or Seth, and a different number of generations down the line? The discrepancy would only amount to maybe a couple hundred years in the age of the earth, but if the writers of Genesis couldn't get such simple facts straight, why do we suppose anything else is 100% accurate in the Bible? And where the heck did Cain and Seth find their wives, anyway?

            One might also point out that there is nothing that connects the Garden of Eden story to the sixth or seventh day of Genesis chapter 1. For all we know thousands or millions of years had passed between chapters 1 and 2.
      • i always found it incredibly funny that my pastor would blame everything on "pre-flood" times where the earth was surrounded by water

        Stop right there. Your pastor's a Jack Chick level moron.

        Even if we presume that God intended to flood the world from the get-go, He didn't need to make a "second sphere" of water; he could just point to a cloud and say "make it rain", and alter creation to keep the water pouring.

        The simple fact is that the universe looks like it's 14 billion years old. Either it really is this old, we've misinterpreted the data and it's a different age, or God created it looking 14 billion less 6,000.

        *sigh*
    • Okay, I'll bite... Who's Years?. e.g. Are we talking about 365.24 24hour days?
    • Not quite.. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ArthurDent ( 11309 ) <.moc.liamg. .ta. .ytinavsselgninaem.> on Friday September 20, 2002 @10:29AM (#4296959) Homepage Journal
      It's not quite that easy. In the original Hebrew for the Bible's creation story, the word commonly translated "day" can also mean an indeterminate period of time. So, there is no way of fixing the beginning of the Bible's timeline exactly.

      The first man (Adam) of the Bible shows up around 6000 years ago. Interestingly, this is within a couple of orders of magnitude of when it's thought humans developed speech communication abilities. (There was a /. story about this a while ago. Go look it up!)

      I'm a believer in the "period of time" angle on that word, thinking that God created the world via the means of evolution. Don't get me started about why we still have monkeys! ;-)

      Ben
      • The first man (Adam) of the Bible shows up around 6000 years ago. Interestingly, this is within a couple of orders of magnitude of when it's thought humans developed speech communication abilities.

        Scientific Phrase: "Correct within an order of Magnitude"

        Translation: Wrong

    • Everyone knows the Universe is only 4000 years old :)

      No no no, the universe is 6000 years old. Haven't you played CivII?
    • "Everyone knows the Universe is only 4000 years old :)"

      The Universe was created in 1983. All evidence to the contrary (including our memory of 1982) was fabricated by God to test our faith. Those who disagree are certainly among the hellbound.

      Steve
  • Heh (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 20, 2002 @05:34AM (#4295864)
    flicker of light from nearly 14 billion years ago

    Wow. That's like God's own first post.
  • Yahoo! News Links (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 20, 2002 @05:35AM (#4295866)
    This is a must humble request to the editors to avoid linking stories on Yahoo! News, especially when it's from a major wire like the AP or Reuters... Yahoo! removes stories after two weeks, so the links just end up dead. You can imagine this is quite annoying when you search for a story [slashdot.org] and end up at a 404 because they used Yahoo! News.
    • This is a must humble request to the editors to avoid linking stories on Yahoo! News, especially when it's from a major wire like the AP or Reuters... Yahoo! removes stories after two weeks, so the links just end up dead. You can imagine this is quite annoying when you search for a story [slashdot.org] and end up at a 404 because they used Yahoo! News.

      When they went to search for early universe radiation, what if radio asronomers got, "404 - Link Moved or Not Found."?

      Would that require a new cosmic theory?
  • by c_de_bugger ( 609837 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @05:49AM (#4295892)
    When they first detected the ripples in the background microwave radiation it was descibed as 'The face of God'.
    Is this polarization confirmation he was wearing shades?
    about how old he was.
  • by moon_monkey ( 323491 ) <elephantcrisp@googlemail.com> on Friday September 20, 2002 @06:04AM (#4295922)
    This story [newscientist.com] at NewScientist.com has more information.
  • Matter (Score:2, Interesting)

    by MjDascombe ( 549226 )
    Is just really, really slow light. You'll see...
  • by Overcoat ( 522810 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @06:15AM (#4295943)
    Way back then, light and matter were only just beginning to separate from each other

    14 billion years ago, matter and light were inseperable. They went everywhere together. Friends cheerfully complemented them on their strong attachment to each other, but whispered behind their backs about 'co-dependency'.

    Then, something happened. No one apart from a few math-sodden physics profs are quite sure what is was. Some say matter was too indecisive, today forming simple hydrogen isotopes, tomorrow churning out all sorts of unstable heavy metals. Others blame light for being too inflexible, not wanting to 'move too fast'.

    Whatever the cause was, matter and light decided to separate. Matter moved on, churning out everything from noble gases to metals that explode in water, satisfying every creative urge. Light, the brighter of the two, contented to be always aglow, yet unafraid to reveal shadows when the opportunity arose.

    The tragic part of the tale involves the unfortunate castoff children of the great breakup, as divorces are never easy on offspring. Cosmic ray wreaks havoc anywhere and everywhere. Cynical X-Ray prefers to reveal everything hidden, as if compensating for repressed emotion. Young microwave is communicative, but very hot under the collar, and don't even ask about Gamma ray. Maybe someday the children of the great breakup will work out their issues.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I always hear about "new telescopes which will be able to see back to the beginning of the universe". How can that possibly work? With the matter in the universe expanding slowly, (relative to the speed of light) the light from the big bang should be long past us by now -- streaking out into some void way beyond Earth... What did I miss when I wasn't paying attention in physics class?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 20, 2002 @06:44AM (#4295987)
      It's not the matter in the Universe which is "expanding", but the Universe itself. The Big Bang didn't happen at just one point in space; it happened at one point which became all of space. So the Big Bang happened everywhere - Kidderminster, Baghdad, Mercury, Andromeda, everywhere. So there are parts of the Universe which are very very far away from us. Light from these parts has travelled for billions of years to reach us, hence it was intially emitted a very long time ago, at a time just after the Big Bang.
    • by c_de_bugger ( 609837 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @06:58AM (#4296008)
      Many people think the Big Bang theory means that the universe expands like a conventional explosion from a sigular point. This is not correct.
      Imagine an infinite rubber sheet covered in dots. At the beginning of the universe (or as early as we can postulate) this sheet started stretching in all directions , so the dots on it became further apart. This is similar to what happened to the universe, except in the universe it was 3 dimentional. So there is no special place where the big bang happened, it was everywhere
      Since the universe was always infinite and the big bang happened everywhere on the 'sheet', as we look further away we see further back in time. This means light is always coming from every age of the universe since the big bang for us to see. The light in this case came from when the 'sheet' stretched just enough for the density of the universe to allow light to pass freely without being continually absorbed and re-emitted. This is the base microwave background radiation.
      This article is saying polarisation has been detected which means some evidence of the lights last scattering event is present, so this tells us something about the universe at the point when it became opaque to light.
      • Many people think the Big Bang theory means that the universe expands like a conventional explosion from a sigular point. This is not correct.

        Actually, it pretty much is. Although it is sometimes hard to describe these sorts of objects and events with methaphors from our own life, this is actually a reasonably good metaphor. According to every version of the Big Bang Theory I'm aware of, a crucial component of the theory is that all the crap in the universe was extremely close together (some would say at a 0-dimensional point, some would say just really small --- near the size of the proton). Then, for some reason or another, the universe just started expanding, and is pretty big now. So the conventional explosition analogy is actually quite good.

        Now, of couse, if you don't buy the Big Bang theory, then you probably don't subscribe to the "all the shit was in one small place" part of it. Ok, this is reasonable. (And I'm not talking about creationists or any bullshit like that, I mean that there is a serious academic debate in the community as to whether or not the Big Bang happened.) But if you're using the words "Big Bang", then you sort of mean "conventional explosion from a singular point".

        Another thing I want to mention is that you claim that the universe was always infinite and it's just stretching. According to most current theory, this is not true. Most cosmologists would say that the universe is finite in size, and anyone who subscribes to the BB theory must say the universe is finite in size, since it could only have grown a finite amount in 15 (or whatever) billion years.

        As an aside, just because the universe is finite does not mean that we could go far enough and hit an edge. Cosmologists also believe that the universe wraps on itself in a higher dimensional way, so that we could travel in a "straight line" for an infinite amount of time without hitting and edge. For those of you who don't have the mathematics, think of a lower-dimensional analogy. Look at a guy on the surface of a sphere with finite radius (Earth e.g.) This dude can walk in a "straight line" for an infinite time, just by circling the globe.

        The question has also been asked in this thread: "why are we seeing light from 14 billion years ago now? Will we see 15 billion years ago in a billion years?" The answer is no. The reason we see light from 14 billion years ago is that light travels (hah) at the speed of light. So if you look at an object or region of space which is 14 billion light-years away, you will see it as it was 14 bya. The reason that,these days, we can see further "back in time" is that we can simply see further out in space. Presumably, if we could see far enough away to see far enough back in time, we would be able to observe the BB.

        • What's very difficult for a layperson to comprehend intuitively is: What was outside the 0-dimensional proton-sized particle that existed prior to the Big Bang? What triggered the bang?
          • Yeah, well I think it is difficult for anyone to understand intuitively.

            Actually, in answer to your questions, I would say that they don't really have an answer. First of all, as I said in an earlier post (which is perhaps in this thread), the BB theory is even being called into question pretty seriously. But even given that one accepts the theory absolutely, then who knows the answers to those questions?

            Certainly, the answer to "what triggered the bang?" is "Who the fuck knows?" The only philosophically satisfying answer I could come up with is that the universe just had an explosion "built-in". Which of course explans nothing.

            The question about what was outside the particle is also not really well defined. I can't think of a way we would ever observe "outside the universe" (and we certainly can't now). Therefore, a scientist can't answer the question. Maybe it's a big-ass stack of turtles, who knows? If you can't observe a phenomenon, what can you say about it?

        • a crucial component of the theory is that all the crap in the universe was extremely close together....Then, for some reason or another, the universe just started expanding, and is pretty big now.

          Somebody back then got tired of paying high prices for real-estate, and thus found a way to create more space.

          IOW, our universe is capitalism at work.
  • If anyone actually read the real article they would be appaled at the sensationalism applied to this story by the slashdot editors and the submitting person. The ONLY thing it solidifies is the polarization aspects and NOTHING ELSE.

    It is getting quite disgusting as how Slashdot's editors are allowing this site to become the new "weekly world news". what's next stories about a two headed alien worm baby and a phycic moose found in northern canada?

  • by cgreer ( 325874 ) on Friday September 20, 2002 @08:54AM (#4296413)
    I work at UChicago (Carlstrom, the professor here, is my advisor). For more information about CMB polarisation, I reccomend Wayne Hu's (a theorists) webpages at http://background.uchicago.edu [uchicago.edu].

    He provides an excellent lay (and more complicated,
    if you're interested) introduction to what's going on here.

    Essentially, it boils down to the fact that people
    have been looking for this phenomenon for 20 years, and if someone finally said conclusively, "It's not there" that means the last few decades of cosmology would literally have been back to the drawing board.

    This really is an exciting timne in cosmology.

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