Earliest Stellar Objects Found 38
Microsofts slave writes "Scientists belive that they have found the earliest objects (new zork times registration required) in space. 26 galaxies and three quasars were observed at thirteen billion light years away, at time when the universe is belived to have been only 1 billion years old."
Infocom? (Score:3, Funny)
Good thing it's free... (Score:2)
Re:Good thing it's free... (Score:2)
Re:Infocom? (Score:2)
Zorks! (Score:1, Funny)
Does this mean the universe will hit old age and die faster?
Re:Zorks! (Score:1)
I thought that asking if the universe will burn out sooner would be legit.........
Re:Zorks! (Score:1)
Also, if our universe that we know started out as a black hole (someone posted some formulas and stuff in another thread), wouldn't it be safe to surmise that all black holes create a new universe?
Re:Zorks! (Score:2)
IIRC, German keyboards have the Z and Y keys close together but in true Slashdot tradition, I can't be bothered to check this (purported) fact right now. Nyah.
God /. Just use the google partner thing... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:God /. Just use the google partner thing... (Score:2)
weird (Score:4, Informative)
If so, that means the average rate of expansion of the universe since that time had to be at least 4/5 C... Unless our physics model is flawed on the large scale, whish it probably is... Who knows, maybe the observed outward acceleration of the universe is due to a force many orders of magnitude weaker than gravity but repelling and inversely proportional to R instead of R^2 so it would be important on the extremely large scale but unnoticeable on the scale of individual galaxies... That would fubar all our redshift measurements and wreak havoc on our largely speculative cosmological model... who knows...
Re:weird (Score:2, Interesting)
I believe the current belief is that the "other side" is heading away already beyond C. We will never see that stuff and there is no way that a Dr. Evil on that side can catch us (under current phyz.) Perhaps this is the anthropic principle protecting us.
(The anthropic principle is cool. I always wanted to start a cult around it -- a more logical El Ron
Re:weird (Score:2)
Re:weird (Score:2)
There is no epicenter of the Big Bang. It's everywhere. Space itself was created with the Big Bang, remember.
Imagine the universe as a balloon that starts out incredibly tiny, and is then blown up to full size. What's the epicenter of the balloon? It doesn't have one, it's everywhere.
This is also why it's possible that two galaxies can seem to move at higher than c relative to each other - they do not actually move that fast, rather the space between them can expand to make it seem that way.
Re:weird (Score:2)
Re:weird (Score:1)
And, Hey, as we all know, things get really interesting once you go beyond what is on the surface.
Re:weird (Score:2)
Re:weird (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, yes. You will worship me as an all-powerful cult leader and give me all your money because if I weren't an all-powerful cult leader then there wouldn't have been a cult in the first place. Hehe
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Dumb cosmology question? (Score:3, Interesting)
Some suggest [berkeley.edu] that initial expansion was faster than light speed, and that the Hubble expansion is accelerating.
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:4, Informative)
The universe seems to be open, which means it's infinite in extent. However, we can only observe a finite part of it, because light from more distant parts hasn't had time to get to us since the Big Bang. Stuff very far away from us, beyond what's observable to us, is theoretically moving at greater than the speed of light relative to us.
IIRC, in standard cosmological models the stuff at the edge of the observable universe is moving away from us at exactly the speed of light.
You can also think of the expansion as a growth of space itself, not just the motion of galaxies away from each other.
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:2)
While what you say may be true (or not), it does not seem to be a requirement. If we can see 13 billion light years, and there is only another billion to go, it seems quite possible that we could see nearly the entire universe, as it existed at the age of 1 billion.
Of course it was all dark, since the plasma hadn't allowed neutral hydrogen to form yet.
There are parts of the universe that are receding from us at the speed of light and faster. Although we might choose a definition of "universe" such that things permanently outside our light cone are excluded, we can indeed see all the way to the big bang -- that's what the cosmic microwave background is.
So we can see all the way back to when the universe was small. It would appear that the further back you look, the more of the universe you can see.
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:1)
Although we might choose a definition of "universe" such that things permanently outside our light cone are excluded
In a universe with zero cosmological constant, there is nothing that is permanently outside our observable region.
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:2, Insightful)
How do you know / suspect this? I'm not suggesting that you're wrong, I'm just wondering what the evidence to support it is. After all if its outside of the observable universe, how can we tell what features it has?
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:1)
After all if its outside of the observable universe, how can we tell what features it has?
The observation that we live in an open universe, combined with general relativity, make a definite prediction: that the size of the part of the universe observable to us will grow without limit. It's infinite in the sense that if you wait long enough, you can see as much of a volume of space as you like. Sort of like how the number of integers is infinite in the sense that if you count long enough, you can name as many integers as you like.
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:2, Interesting)
One thing that still doesn't make sense though; If the observable universe will grow without limit then the distance that we can see further back in time will also grow without limit - isn't this a contradiction with the claim that that time started at a finite distance in the past?
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:1)
No. If the universe's age is X, then X is how far back in the past you can see. X increases by one year with every year that passes.
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:2)
Ah good point. I hadn't considered that. But then, if the universe has grown to infinite size in finite time doesn't that imply an infinite rate of expansion?
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:2)
No. If it's an open universe, then there was never a time when it was finite.
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:2)
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:1)
BTW, I wonder if Slashcode imposes a limit on the depth of replies to replies to replies ... :-)
Re:Dumb cosmology question? (Score:2)
Well, there's only one way to find out
I'm read a fair bit on relativity and string theory, I'm quite familiar with the ideas of inflation et al, I've just never come across the definite assumption that the universe is infinite in expanse. Are there any specific weblinks - yup, I'm that lazy, the library is in the next building, and its raining
mistake in title (Score:3, Informative)
mistakes everywhere (Score:1)