Motion of the Primordial Universe Revealed 63
neutron_p writes "New results from an instrument located high in the Chilean Andes (the Cosmic Background Imager) are giving researchers a clearer view of what the universe looked like in the first moments following the Big Bang. Cosmologists observe a time in the universe's distant past when atoms were first forming. The findings reveal the first movements between these "seeds" that ultimately led to clusters of early galaxies."
Reading the article (Score:3, Funny)
Which lead to renewed enthusiasm about the name, as apposed to previous suggestions:
The Big Yet Apathetic And Lethargic Singlular Point Of Spontaneous Existence Creation By Magic.
I believe that the Big Bang we hear are echoes of cosmic events that may have happened anywhere. I also think that there was a real bang, when reality and existence in thier mortal plane was created.
If you think that is more crazy than an inexplicable universe full of toothpicks, then please by all means explain yourself.
Re:Reading the article (Score:1)
The motions (Score:2)
Re:The motions (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The motions (Score:2)
Where's the discovery report? (Score:1)
Anthony Readhead.... says the new polarization results provide strong support for the standard model of the universe as a place in which dark matter and dark energy are much more prevalent than everyday matter.
THank you Mr. Readhead, and now
This has always confused me (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2, Informative)
One of the theories is that the universe is a torus. (donut shape, now don't eat it Homer) But this isn't what makes us see it.
To clear up your confusion, the way I see it is this background of the radaiton is the surface of that intial ba
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2, Informative)
As to the first part. It is due to the severe redshifted nature of this radation that puts it
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
One of the theories that is attached to the standard model claims that there is some "inverse gravity" (I'm summarizing A LOT here!) provided by some yet-to-find particles (what could make the dark matter is a good candidate) or forces. More, there are assumptions that gravity is a strong attracting force locally (at short distance), but at the scale of the universe, it would actually be a repulsive force. Talk about mind blowing!
until I
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
For what I know, they (I really don't remember the names) actually used a model with gravitational force that was repulsive at huge distances when they tried to build a static model of universe (ie. one which does not collapse back after a couple billion years). Eventually it had to be trashed because it didn't
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Clown: "Who the hell keeps drawing dots on MY balloons! I bet its that creepy space-head professor who lives next door."
Re:This has always confused me (Score:4, Informative)
Yes. During inflation the universe expanded not at several times the speed of light, but rather doubled its size every 10^-34 of a second. After about a hundred doublings the inflationary period ended and expansion slowed to (locally) sub-light speeds.
The microwave background didn't come from the big bang though. It was actually emitted from the surface of last scattering when the universe became transparent for the first time--around 300k years after the big bang.
The "center of the universe" is not well-defined. If the universe is topologically closed, then it has neither center nor boundary, like the surface of the earth. If the universe is topologically open, then it is infinite in size and similarly has neither center nor boundary.
TTFN
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Perhaps this is a foolish question.
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2, Informative)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
If I understand you correctly then you are saying that if there is a particle at some point and the point is moving because of expansion then the particle will not move with the point (or with the same rate)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:3, Informative)
The particle moves with the point. This causes particles at sufficiently distant locations in the universe to be moving faster than light relative to each other.
This is still consistent with relativity. The usual way of explaining this is to say that the particles are standing still, and space itself
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
I thinnk the same princile is behind the fictitious star trek warp drive.
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
A ballon can inflate as fast as it likes. Any ants on the surface of that ballon get carried along with that inflation. Relativity says that ants cannot crawl across the surface of the ballon faster than a certain speed.
Nothing can move through space faster than light, but when the space itself moves the the stuff in it gets carried along.
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Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Suppose there are two ant then the ant see the other ant moving away with the speed of light. this means the clock in the other ant frame of reference has stopped and the ant has infinite mass.
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Ok, say two ants are right next to each other. Lets call them Alice and Bob. Both are motionless. They each have a clock, and the clocks are sycronized.
Not I want to introduce a certain concept of hot you look at a clock. At an instant some light bounces off of the clock. That arrangment is like a photgraph of the clock. It then flies to your eye and you see that photo.
Ok, so Alice and Bob ar
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
I am not a physicist so bear with me. The problem with your explanation is that you say when time slows down because the observer SEE it slowing. This is not the case, the time actually slows down. you can make correction for the speed of light still you will see the clock slowing down.
Consider my example. Alice is travelling in a train and Bob is in the platform. On the train floor is a light source which sends a beam straight up the ceiling. On the ceiling is a mirror which reflects
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
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Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Your example has Alice actually traveling through space. Remember I specifically pointed out that both Alice and Bob are each motionless, so from that viewpoint their clocks will run at the same rate. From other viewpoints the ordinary notion of time gets shot all to hell.
Traveling through space and being carried along by expanding space look much the same, but in some cases they have some different implications. For example n
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Q1. Will Alice actually see Bob clock slowing down ?
Ans: Yes.
Not see as in it takes some amount of time for the light to reach Alice but see as it in Alice adjust the time by taking that time in account. For example if Alice sees that the Bob clock is 1200 hrs and Bob at that time is 1 light hour away then Alice will assume
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Alice is travelling in a train and Bob is in the platform. etc etc etc...
Ok, you explain how Bob see's Alice's clock appears to run slower. The problem is that you are thinking that Alice's clock is actually running slower. It is not. That may sound wrong, but bear with me a second.
Instead of looking at it from Bob's point of view lets ride along with Alice. We l
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
I also cheated here, because what I explained was not my explanation. You can read it from
http://www.physicsguy.com/ftl/html/FTL_part1.html/ [physicsguy.com]. The article explains that how the time slows down.
I am not a physicist so all my understanding comes about the relativity comes from this article.
My orginal question was how come the universe can expand at the rate which is faste
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Your own link says time (clock) does *not* slow down:
Now, don't be fooled! One of the first concepts which can get into the mind of a newcomer to relativity involves a statement like, "if you are moving, your clock slows down." However, the question of which clock is really running slowly (yours or mine) has no absolute answer!
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Also, if I accept you reasoning then if Alice and Bob are moving toward each other the clock will go faster for Bob in Alice frame of refern
Re:This has always confused me (Score:4, Informative)
Well IANAP, but I'll explain what I understand of it.
Relativity requires that no signal can travel faster than the speed of light. During inflation, nearby parts of the universe move away from each other faster than the speed of light. However, because there is no signal traveling FTL, causality is not violated.
TTFN
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Well, what I meant to say is that the inflation process does not cause information to go from one part of the universe to another faster than light can, so it does not violate causality.
TTFN
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Exactly... Just to make the point more clear, the "surface" of last scattering is really a point in time - the photons that were released at the time of the last scattering (last interaction with matter, when it changed from opaque to optically thin) filled the entire universe at that time. T
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
According to Big Bang theory, if you extrapolate back toward t=0, all objects get closer and closer together. That's not really the same as "originating at a point", which seems to imply that it started at a specific physical location. The origin is a singularity, in the sense that the density rises to infinity and distances between any two objects gets asymptotically smaller, but it c
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Yes. Except that all points expanded at a rather amazing speed away from the point of origin. The microwave radition we're getting now is the radition from points that are about 13 billion light years away "now", along the path the radiation took.
Since we only have a 13-billion light year radius bubble of information, we can only conjecture as to what shape the univers
Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:3, Informative)
Re:This has always confused me (Score:1, Informative)
All points were the point of origin, because there was only one point to start with. Only later did the universe get big enough that you could distinguish point A from point B by the distance between them -- but then both points have an equal claim to having been "the original point of origin".
The reason scientists are so keen on the exa
Re:This has always confused me (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes (well, technically it doesn't in a curved space-time, but since the universe is globally flat, any deviations are extremely small on average).
Yes.
Uh... here's where you've lost me. They're going in straight lin
Re:This has always confused me - me too (Score:2)
Now if you want to say that this means the universe is closed, I can see that, but would that not also mean that any radiation we see from "near the beginning" would have to be not less
Re:This has always confused me - me too (Score:3, Insightful)
Those two statements are different... matter cannot move faster than the speed of light, but the expansion of the universe can.
In fact, the expansion of the universe doesn't have a physical velocity associated with it - it's a fractional rate of change. So if the universe expands at "0.1 Gyr^-1", then proper distances increase by 10% per gigayear (*). If the distance you're interested in is larger than 10 billion light ye
Re:This has always confused me - me too (Score:2)
Hubble's constant is a ratio scale measure, the "speed" is protportionate to the distance being discussed. I remember that much from college physics. Now, I also remember George Gamow, in one of his books via a raisin bread analogy, explaining the red shift limit as a function of the expansion of the universe, and saying more or less that the apparent speed that remote bodies are receding is due to the cumulative expansion of the space in between. The fa
Re:This has always confused me - me too (Score:2)
Ah, but remember that the distance between the two objects is getting larger. Which means that the red shift has been getting larger with time. If we see a photon from an object that's currently moving away from us at the spee
Rubber geometry (Score:2)
Re:Rubber geometry (Score:2)
Heheh... I purposely avoided using calculus to make sure I didn't lose anyone. :-)=
Yes, it's quite possible for two objects to have relative speeds that are greater than the speed of light. What I think you're getting at is that photons that are currently emitted from an object that is currently moving away from us at greater than the speed of light will never reach us. But we can see photons that were emitted from these objects in the past.
Re:Rubber geometry (Score:2)
Ah huh!
Re:This has always confused me (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing that is confusing you is that you have the very common image of the big bang being like a hand grenade explosion in the vacuum of space. You are picturing there is some point in the middle of our universe that was the center, from which everything spread out. The big bang is is no normal explosion, it was an explosion of space not in space, and there is no center in our universe.
In order to explain a picture of what it *is* like we need to imaging the universe is 2D instead of 3D. Imagine we live in a 2D sheet of rubber rather than 3D space. Now lets curve that sheet of rubber around into a ballon. We live in the surface of that ballon. There is *nothing* inside or outside the skin of the ballon - not even a vacuum. Our universe *is* the skin. You, me, the sun, the stars, they are specs within that skin.
That ballon is expanding. In the past the was smaller. Imagine running backwards, srhinking that ballon down to a point. That point would be the big bang. It was in the past, sort of in the center of our current ballon. That point is not anywhere in our universe, it is not on the skin of the ballon.
Now to explain the microwaves we see from the big bang. When you run backwards all of the stars and dust and gas were closer together in the skin of that smaller ballon. Go back far enough and everything in our universe was squashed togther - everywhere. There was very little space itself for it all to fit in. All of the space in our universe was filled with a dense hot soup of glowing particles.
So that glow came from everywhere in our universe. No matter what direction we look, that point umpteen billion light years away was glowing umpteen billion years ago. The very spot we are at now was glowing umpteen billion years ago, and if someone billions of light years from here were to look at us they would see that old glow from here.
Did that make sense?
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Re:This has always confused me (Score:2)
Wrong.
If that was the case, then the Universe of matter would form an expanding spherical shell with the detonation point at the centre. What would we observe? Answer: galaxies all aligned in one plane as we look tangentially along the sphere, complete void in the outward direction, and maybe a very faint glow f
More information (Score:4, Informative)
The big news is that they've measured the polarized power spectrum, and it agrees extremely well with the theoretical predictions. Which means that not only do the density fluctuations match what's expected, but the matter is moving in the gravitational field of those density fluctuations exactly as expected.
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Flat as the proverbial. (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Fast Expansion (Score:1)
Re:Fast Expansion (Score:2)