Hubble Finds a Galaxy 12.8 Billion Years Old 134
I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "Hubble's Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) has discovered the 12.8B year old galaxy now known as A1689-zD1. Using gravitational lensing of the massive Abell 1689 cluster of galaxies, they were able to find a surprisingly bright young galaxy from only 700 million years after the Big Bang, during the cosmic 'dark ages.' Researchers are itching to study the object with the upcoming Atacama Large Millimeter Array (to go online in 2012) and James Webb Space Telescope (to launch in 2013)."
The galaxy commented only... (Score:5, Funny)
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And I found a sober Irishman (Score:1, Flamebait)
Do they cut it in half and count the rings? (Score:1)
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it could just be a very HOT star eg a star with some odd materials and thus more red light
can someone please elaborate
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Astronomy Cast [astronomycast.com]
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The picture at the top of that page is a pretty good explanation. Basically you just take the absorption lines of some known materials and compare them to the absorption lines seen in whatever is being observed.
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The Hubble law's linear relationship between distance and redshift assumes that the rate of expansion of the universe is constant. However, when the universe was much younger, the expansion rate, and thus the Hubble "constant", was larger than it is today. For more distant galaxies, then, whose light has been travelling to us for much longer times, the approximation of constant expansion rate fails, and the Hubble law becomes a non-linear integral relationship and dependent on the history of the expansion rate since the emission of the light from the galaxy in question. Observations of the redshift-distance relationship can be used, then, to determine the expansion history of the universe and thus the matter and energy content.
While it was long believed that the expansion rate has been continuously decreasing since the big-bang, recent observations of the redshift-distance relationship using Type Ia supernovae have suggested that in comparatively recent times the expansion rate of the universe has begun to accelerate.
Maybe we need a new law -- the farther away an object is, the more assumptions we have to make to pretend we know anything about it. Another thing I always wondered about redshift - what if the object in question is itself moving at a high speed unrelated to the apparently uniform "expansion" we see with other objects? Wouldn't that affect the amount of red shift and throw off the distance estimate?
Re:Do they cut it in half and count the rings? (Score:4, Funny)
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allow | deny
Re:Do they cut it in half and count the rings? (Score:5, Interesting)
http://hubblesite.org/reference_desk/faq/answer.php.id=45&cat=galaxies [hubblesite.org]
Though I have no idea how exactly they did it this time. That's just the general procedure. According to TFA that's just an estimation and the exact age of the galaxy is yet to be determined; that's what those new telescopes would be useful for.
What's even more interesting though:
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Is c still a constant over such a distance? (Score:1)
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Re:Do they cut it in half and count the rings? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's starts with curiosity: "How do they know how old it is?"
Which gets extended to skepticism: "How could they possibly be sure? Maybe their assumptions are wrong."
Which somehow becomes rejection: "Scientists don't really know anything, it's all just belief!"
Then the gigantic illogical leap: "Thus any alternative hypothesis I propose is equally viable."
And then the 'reveal' which is: "So I bet my spiritual guide book could serve as a physics textbook if you interpreted it literally!"
Unfortunately, you can't really tell the difference between a normal reasonable person and a closet creationist until you're several steps in. It kinda pisses me off, the way the Creationists have adopted the strategy of Intelligent Design and hiding their beliefs as though they're just genuine scientific skeptics with an open mind, when nothing could be further from the truth.
Though I agree with you, in this case I think this was legitimate curiosity, and the GP was just being paranoid. It won't take that long to tell if I'm wrong.
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One thing is though we do not definitely know that the speed of Light in another galaxy is the same as ours. Perhaps each particular area of the universe has its own speed based upon its mass or some other unknown quantity.
Right now we assume it is the same and make measurements based upon it... and that is fine for now. One day we will more fully understand about the other galaxies and may need to make adjustments.
Not long ago it was believed the Sun rotated around the Earth and now we believe
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Good Golly, like what?
If the speed of light is not constant, then physical law (e.g. Maxwell's equations) is not the same everywhere, and energy is not conserved, there is no Second Law of thermodynamics, and basically all hell breaks loose. The speed of light isn't just the speed at which light travels. It's a fundamental constant that appears
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On a related note, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Rip [wikipedia.org] speculates that gravity may not work at distances over 46.5e9 light years, and that that distance is decreasing over time. If true, then eventually "all hell breaks loose".
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I even have a theory of my own! Suppose c begins at infinity and decrease to 0. When c is infinity, then there is no distance dimension, since everything happens everywhere at once. There is only time. The Universe "occupies" a point, in the sense that it occupies anything at all. That is, we've the primordial Big Bang.
As soon as c decr
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Then the gigantic illogical leap: "Thus any alternative hypothesis I propose is equally viable."
Thats disingenuous. The beliefs of people you or I may disagree with are not formed in any more of a vacuum than our own. In general. Anybody who you believe to be absolutely wrong should never be 'credited' with coming up with a hypothesis you deem incorrect anymore than you should be credited with knowing the right answer. You turn it into a one person versus many issue. The reality of
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Thats disingenuous. The beliefs of people you or I may disagree with are not formed in any more of a vacuum than our own.
Whatever. I'm talking about a rhetorical device. Pardon my lax use of pronouns.
Unfortunately, you can't really tell the difference between a normal reasonable person (whatever that means) and somebody you disagree with until you talk to them. Is that any surprise?
You don't get what I'm saying. With your average person who is curious and/or skeptical of science, they're asking these qu
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To address the article though, yes, the 12.8 billion year figure is pulled out of someone's ass. Granted, there was some math involved, but there is far too little data to calculate the actual age of the earth, never mind anything else. Those with a chip on their shoulder will of course take offense to the blanket disbelief of the "scientific consensus".
Realists
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To address the article though, yes, the 12.8 billion year figure is pulled out of someone's ass. Granted, there was some math involved, but there is far too little data to calculate the actual age of the earth, never mind anything else. Those with a chip on their shoulder will of course take offense to the blanket disbelief of the "scientific consensus".
Realists know that betting against the current science when it regards dates is about as safe as a bet as you can make. It is 100% guaranteed to be found incorrect, probably within 50 years. Date setters just want attention. If they were intellectually honest, they wouldn't bother.
All right here's your person with a chip on his shoulder. Regardless as whether or not you take the calculations behind the age of the universe to be valid, to claim that date-setting is intellectually dishonest is rather stupid. Let's say that 100 years ago, I came up with a model of the universe that resulted in the age of the universe being 300 million years old. Later when evidence is found indicating that there exist objects that are 1 billion years old, my model will clearly be proven to be wrong.
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It's intellectually dishonest because no reasonable person could possibly believe that they can calculate the age of a distant object with any precision with the knowledge we currently possess. They are attention-seeking deviants, and paper shouldn't be wasted on their effort to gain
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Just because they are not 100% sure it is exactly that year dosen't mean they shouldn't release the findings. They are important anyway as they build up our understanding of the universe.
I'm not sure if you have mistyped or you have confused the meaning of the article, but its got nothing to do with the age of the ea
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"ust because they are not 100% sure it is exactly that year dosen't mean they shouldn't release the findings."
Actually, they aren't sure at all. So they shouldn't. You say 100% as if they might be close.
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It seems to me you are mixing Creationists with Young Earthers. I suppose there is overlap, though I don't think any use a 6,000 year old Earth.
It doesn't really matter though clearly the young Earthers are a special case of Creationists. Neither belief system is based on observation of the universe. And I have run into sincere believers in a 6,000 year old Earth and universe.
To address the article though, yes, the 12.8 billion year figure is pulled out of someone's ass. Granted, there was some math involved, but there is far too little data to calculate the actual age of the earth, never mind anything else. Those with a chip on their shoulder will of course take offense to the blanket disbelief of the "scientific consensus".
So how wrong do you think they are? Care to give a range? By an order of magnitude or more? And I'm puzzled by your inclusion of Earth in this. There's considerable data indicating that the Earth is around 4.5 billion years old, using radioactive decay and samples from nu
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I don't claim to know. I'm saying they don't.
"here's considerable data indicating that the Earth is around 4.5 billion years old, using radioactive decay and samples from numerous solar system bodies including asteroids, the Moon, and even Mars. Further, the estimated age of the Sun is consistent with this as well (it can be estimated both by it's relative size, mass, and temperature, as well as by it's lithium content)"
I'm not actually addressing
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I don't claim to know. I'm saying they don't.
That's not an answer. It's not a two state problem where the guess is right or wrong, or someone knows or doesn't know. For example, a 1% error in the estimate of the age of Earth is far different from a six orders of magnitude error (like the young Earthers' claims).
I'm not actually addressing the Earth's age. I don't actually care how old it is, though I'm sure the 4.5 billion year figure is wrong, too. Do you really think that 50 years from now, people will still think the Earth is 4.5 billion years old? How old did they think the Earth was 50 years ago? And you can't say 4,499,999,950 years :)
I think there's a high probability (greater than 50%) that yes, the accepted estimate of Earth's age remains near 4.5 billion years.
What I am addressing is the even more ridiculous, given the exponentially smaller set of data we can obtain, setting of the 12.8 billion year old figure for the galaxy in question.
"Exponentially" less data? Doesn't mean a thing. Besides you don't need an equivalent amount of data in
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"For example, a 1% error in the estimate of the age of Earth is far different from a six orders of magnitude error (like the young Earthers' claims)"
This assumes that there is only a 1% error. You conveniently didn't answer the question regarding the 4.5 billion year figure as of 50 years ago. What was it then? Was it a 1% difference? By using "1%" you attempt to imply that the difference usually is 1%, which I would like to see expl
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This is absurd. I mentioned those physical constants for a reason. 50 years ago, those were also either poorly known or inconceivable. But no amount of scientific advancement is going to change the value of those constants nor show some massive error in the past 50 years of observation. Why aren't you claiming estimates of those constants are "wrong"?
As I see it, you don't understand the research that has gone into estimate the age of the Earth or cosmological distances. Nor do you demonstrate any knowled
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Even taking into account the possibility of these "constants" never changing, new data previously "unknown" will change the date.
50 year old estimates were also based on "constants" which are either now not so constant, or don't provide the whole picture. Again, you fail to address the point: How is this date accurate when previous dates were inaccurate? Those previous dates were set using the same arguments you use
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50 year old estimates were also based on "constants" which are either now not so constant, or don't provide the whole picture. Again, you fail to address the point: How is this date accurate when previous dates were inaccurate? Those previous dates were set using the same arguments you use now.
We have more data, better models, and the development of reliable dating techniques like measurements of radioactive decay. 50 years ago, we didn't have that, particularly we had no means to date rocks and meteorites.
I don't need to demonstrate an error in calculation, as I am questioning any ability to perform a calculation with so little data. Why don't you show me the data that convinces you that the distant galaxy mentioned is 12.8 billion years old. Show me your raw data that allows you to even apply a mathematical formula.
You don't know the data. The Hubble's Law data is brightness measurements of supernova type IA out to several hundred million lightyears, very accurate red shift data, the cosmic microwave backgroud data, etc. For the above galaxy, we have the redshift of the target object, the redshift of
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"That is, the universe is about 13.7 billion years old,[1] with an uncertainty of 200 million years. However, this age is based on the assumption that the project's underlying model is correct; other methods of estimating the age of the universe could give different ages. Assuming an extra background of relativistic particles, for example, can enlarge the error bars of the WMAP constraint by one order of magnitude"
"Assuming the validity of the models used to determine this age, the residual a
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Then that's the source of your error.
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What an amazing lack of introspection.
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I heard a very nice debate on NPR where Scientists and Creationists who believe in evolution, etc. were having it out over whether religion and science can co-exist peacefully. A great point was made by one party (couldn't listen long enough to find out
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I for one welcome this less "fucking idiotic" overlord. Thank you for this post.
Re: Do they cut it in half and count the rings? (Score:2)
I'm getting pretty sick of all the fucking idiots like you here on Slashdot. It's pretty fucking basic: just because a class of Creationists have decided to call their flavor of belief Intelligent Design does not mean that the class of people who recognize Intelligent Design as a functioning and present method of speciation and evolution are actually Creationists.
Intelligent Design is prima facie nonsense. It doesn't offer any functioning method for anything, let alone one that actually works.
And it's creationism, pure and simple. Scratch an IDiot and you get an evangelical. Or a Republican who wants the evangelical vote.
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I sort of figure his example of the Basset Hound is, prima facie, proof that you're a fucking idiot. It obviously works. I mean, the hound is no wolf. I think there's a good point there.
And what does that point have to do with the Intelligent Design movement, which consists of nothing but bogus proofs that evolution couldn't have done this or that, followed by equally bogus conclusions that "somebody" must have done it instead?
Did you learn where basset hounds came from by doing a CSI calculation?
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More seriously, breeder's logs, photos from kennel clubs, and such ARE the equivalent of a fossil record. Artificial selection has happened over such an accelerated timespan that the record for the evolution of Basset Hounds is far more complete than for any natural species from its immediate predecessors. Extremely r
Re:Do they cut it in half and count the rings? (Score:4, Insightful)
And do you believe that this same mechanism accounts for all genetic diversity? Because if you are only talking about selective breeding, then guess what? That's NOT capital-I-D Intelligent Design, you dumb fuck. That's "selective breeding", or in the case of attractive females "sexual selection", both about as mundane and mainstream of theories as evolution itself and not having special theory names.
What you're doing is like me going "Der, Evolution isn't necessarily about random changes altering populations through natural selection you moron! To me Evolution is about species wanting to change because they feel in their hearts that they can be better!" No, wrong, that's not what evolution is. And "Intelligent Design" is not the theory that some things on earth were designed by an (our) intelligence. It's a theory that is an alternate explanation for the diversity of all species. Though I give it more respect than it deserves by calling it a theory.
Look, it's like this: there is no God but there is Intelligent Design.
There is no Intelligent Design without God. Not because you have to believe in God to believe in ID, but because it naturally follows. The primary theorem of ID is that our intelligence is to complex to have arisen naturally, and must have been created by some other intelligence. Well where did that intelligence come from? The same ideas of ID suggest that it couldn't have arisen naturally, so there must be another designer... and so on. Now, if you're religious, that's easy, the original Intelligent Designer is a supernatural being with no beginning or end and thus no need for a creater.
If you're not religious and believe in Intelligent Design, then you're just a giant retard.
And furthermore, there is no difference between a normal reasonable person and a "closet creationist"
Of course there is. A reasonable person, including a reasonable Creationist, is up-front with their beliefs. Lying, duplicitous douchebags who inherently know that their position is not reasonable, but want to trick you into accepting it anyway, feign open-minded skepticism that suddenly turns into evangelism.
Anyway, in summary, you're a fucking idiot--I on the other hand, am quite a bit more gifted and talented than you--but hey bud, you can do better, and I'd like to help you.
Of course you are! Your mom was right, you're special!
Let me help you: there is, unequivocally, at least some flavor of intelligent design in our world.
And with no capital letters there, the answer is: duh! The computers we're using right now were "intelligently designed" by humans. That's not "Intelligent Design". You should at least know what something is before you defend it, jackass.
I fucking hate you.
Aw, but I love you! I think you're very stupid, but I still love you.
It'd be really, really hilarious to me if your whole retarded polemic was because I used the phrase "Intelligent Design" in obvious reference to the non-scientific alternate theory for speciation, while in your personal view there is something that could be called "intelligent design" but isn't what is commonly called -- by anyone -- ID.
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You are, however, a bigot. (Score:2)
*sigh* check the stats. (Score:2)
Further, in 2004, 45% of Americans reported accepting some form current evolutionary theory (including "macro" evolution).
So, while that's a minority, it's not a HUGE minority. Roughly every other American you talk to, all else being equal, will support rational inquiry.
I suspect, since this is Slashdot, that those numbers will be skewed slightly in favor of the science, though the crazies try to make up for it by
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That's still pretty bad that 55% of Americans (a majority) believes in Creationism, whereas in more enlightened parts of the world, that number is probably in the single digits.
Rather than lump us all into "brainwashed Christian" territory, why don't you try ignoring the crazies when they come out of the woodwork?
Crazies? As you yourself just pointed out above, a clear majority of Ameri
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Crazies? ... you're the "crazy" in the minority if you live in America.
I resent being called crazy for simply being an agnostic in America, even though we make up a scant 0.5% of the population.
By "crazies", I refer to those whose mode of debate is intentionally deceptive and misleading. Scientists are misquoted, facts are distorted, bogus statistics are cited, and then when you provide scientific counterarguments, they get emotional and start plugging their ears or damn you to hell rather than listen to you. YMMV but I classify this behavior as crazy.
Of course, this behavior
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Well, you better get over it, because you're crazy. "Crazy" just means your beliefs and behaviors are outside the norm for the general population. So if you're in a group that represents 0.5% of the population, you're definitely crazy in the eyes of the majority. Christians definitely see agnostics as "crazy". FWIW, I'm agnostic too, but I don't mind being considered "weird" or "crazy
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It's perfectly valid and justified, because the submarine-Creationist is attempting to make a scientific argument in order to debunk science to create an opportunity for them to inject Creationism as eq
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Science and religion can coexist because they deal with different aspects of life, and many people, including myself, have no problem with this.
They haven't always been separate, and the modern phenomenon is just God of the Gaps in action. In fact, there are people that believe "the scientific method is better than a literal interpretation of a metaphorical creation story written by and for people thousands of years ago" when it comes to philosophical questions, such as ethics.
I don't necessarily mean test-tube science, though some of that is possible by looking at behavior of self-organizing systems. I mean trying to reason about ethics withou
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If you build bridges based on the teachings of the bible, you'll quickly find out that it doesn't work. (Churches have lightning conductors because they do work.) But if you try to use the discoveries of science to pontificate on the philosophical nature of life, you'll quic
they know how old it CAN be (Score:2)
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Lot of teeth, it's young.
Few teeth, it's old.
Or a NASCAR or wrestling fan.
Probably Doesn't Exist (Score:5, Interesting)
And in a few billion years, we'll get to watch it "live".
Re:Probably Doesn't Exist (Score:5, Funny)
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Well, if that's the case... (Score:2)
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The cake is a lie.
The cake is a lie.
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While the specific stars that are giving off the light we see likely aren't there, that galaxy most likely
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Yep. We can see redshift greater than 1 (and hence 'speeds' greater than c) for very distant objects. (That's not entirely circular - there's other ways to measure distance, such as looking at pulsars etc).
There's also the background microwave radiation, whose temperature fits perfectly the predictions for an expanding matter-dominated 13ish billion year universe.
There's also nucleosynthesis. If you treat the early universe as a simple
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I disagree, on the basis that there exists an objective reality that isn't defined by our perceptions. However, when speaking in terms of astrophysics, it's often convenient to say what's happening now, not 12 billion years ago. Of course, this is one part of a larger debate on perception defining reality.
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But it does make sense to speculate on the properties of some distant object as you would see it if you travelled there by the shortest spacetime distance. For the case of this galaxy it would have aged by around 24 billion years by the time you travelled there, and it is probably would have changed quite considerably in that time.
Alternatively, you could define an inertial reference frame from which the velocity of the earth stays the same magnitude of the velocity of the distant galaxy. This is about
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A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away.... (Score:3, Funny)
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You know, it's funny, yes. But in fact I always imagined this to be part of the mythos of Star Wars. It felt easy to pretend that the reason I was sitting down in a theater in 1977 was that we had intercepted this information from a galaxy far, far away. And of course because of the speed of light it had happened ages ago. It lent a very wonderful quality to the story, I thought.
If... (Score:2)
This kind of thing confuses me (Score:1)
So it's taken the light 12 odd billion years to arrive here, It always makes me wonder whether the galaxy is 12 billion years old, or 12 billion years away - and if it is the latter, does that in any way compare to the former?
Could you conceivably see the big bang with Hubble if the universe is only 13.5 billion years old? Does this mean they know roughly where th
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Re:This kind of thing confuses me (Score:4, Informative)
We get a picture of a galaxy. We can tell from redshift of the characteristics of the light that we're getting to create that picture how far/old that light is. Since we're using the understanding that the speed of light is and has always been constant, how far away and how old are directly related. What people mean is that we're seeing a picture of a galaxy from a long, long time ago. Assuming it's still there, it'd be at least 12.8 billion years old.
Sure we know where the universe began - in your belly button. Seriously, the question doesn't quite make sense (or the answer doesn't make sense - take your pick). The analogy that might help is to think of the universe like a balloon - but only the rubber sheet. not the entire thing. Light, matter, everything is within and goes round that rubber sheet. The balloon is expanding. That's what's causing the redshift, more or less. If we reverse time and view the balloon as shrinking, everything collapses into the Big Bang. But there is no "place" where the universe started. It started everywhere.
However, I believe there is a theoretical limit beyond which we don't expect to be able to see anything. But it isn't because of the reasons you're positing. It's not because stuff isn't that far away. If I recall correctly, it has more to do with when we believe there was stuff to see.
You would need to BE 12-billion light years in ANY direction from said event (and looking towards the event) AT 12-billion years past the event. Then the light from the event reaches you and you can see what happened 12 billion years ago. Say I fire 20 billion baseballs simultaneously in all directions at 60 miles an hour. Assuming no friction, interference, etc., if you are 60 miles away from where I was when I threw the balls at one hour after I threw them, you're gonna get smacked upside the head with a baseball and you'll get to experience my toss from an hour ago, 60 miles away.
Part of what makes this particular story rather interesting, is that not a lot of light is going to reach us from something that far away. If you think of my 20 billion baseballs, you can understand that at some distance you won't get hit because the balls get spread real thin rather quickly. The light from that galaxy is spread VERY thin. The fact we're seeing it at all is because of some nifty little tricks and a whole lot of luck. Basically we're taking advantage of an ENORMOUS magnifying glass to get a better look.
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Seems a bit circular. "We know galaxy is far away because the redshift is caused by expansion. We know redshift is caused by expansion because galaxy is far away."
And maybe I don't understand relativity, but it seems to me that if our galaxy and that one were moving away from each other (due to expansion) at 3 or 4 times the speed of light at the time that the light was emitted, we'd never see that light. I'm pretty s
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It can seem somewhat circular, but pretty much everything in physics is. E.g.:
We know gravity exists because when we drop things, they fall. We know something will fall because gravity will pull it down.
and
The electric field strength is defined as proportional to force
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I'm guessing you mean 12.8 billion years ago. In any case this makes your comment of "The spacetime on which it sits is moving 3 or 4 times the speed of light, relative to us. Even if it was moving really quite fast, it wouldn't affect the redshift by all that much." invalid because the redshift is ba
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The light has a certain wavelength. But then spacetime expands underneath, as it is moving. So the wavelength increases (red shifts).
By the time it reaches us, it's redshift indicates a speed that is pretty much equal to the current speed of the galaxy.
(And yeah, I meant 12.8 billion years)
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Could you conceivably see the big bang with Hubble if the universe is only 13.5 billion years old?
Essentially, yes! You can't see quite back to the big bang itself because at the very beginning the temperatures were too high to allow photons to move freely, but you can get pretty close by observing the Cosmic Microwave Background [wikipedia.org] which was released when the universe became transparent.
Does this mean they know roughly where the universe began and are looking in that direction? If they looked in the other direction, would they run out of things to see because nothing in the universe has traveled out that far yet?
This is always a sticking point of understanding, but the answer is simple - th
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If we were to look away from the point of origin, we should be able to see the same leading edge, whatever is closest to the Big Bang light that emits its own light so that we can see it. This assumes,
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The reason is because while the light has been travelling to us, the spacetime has been expanding, making its distance a lot larger.
In fact, the galaxy is probably moving many times the speed of light away from us currently.
Others have pointed out that the big bang happened 'everywhere'. This is correct
boy, it's old, just look at that crusty beard..... (Score:1, Informative)
Because it's so far away?
How do they know it's so far away?
Because of how long its light took to reach us?
How do they know how long it's light took to reach us?
Well, light goes so fast, and it gets pulled this way and that on the way here and uhhhhhhhhh, well, we're totally guessing, OKAY!!!!!!!!
lol
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Atacama Large Millimeter Array (Score:2)
Why not use a small millimeter? Is size really that important?
Old and new... (Score:5, Informative)
From our point of view, this galaxy is very old, since it existed (in the form in which we are seeing it today) a looong time ago. But if we take, say the Big Bang as the point in time to relate to, this thing isn't all that old, but rather new, young, so to speak.
Keep in mind though, that we are seeing a very young galaxy now because the light has been traveling a while. Sort of like... I take a picture of me and then send it to India. Because of the crude nature of the Indian postal system (and the ones in between), you will only receive this picture one month or so after it was taken. So I might have grown a beard. You are seeing a young galaxy, because the medium you're seeing it through took a while to reach us. But in reality, this galaxy is rather old, because it has been growing old ever since the photons that create the image we are seeing today departed from that galaxy to finally interact with our eyes and fulfill their destiny (ouch, that was really a pathetic attempt at making this sound great).
sigh. I'm only a layman, so I might have explained this pretty badly. You might want to take a look at this site: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_cone [wikipedia.org] it explains the general concept behind this all. Ah yeah, and relativity is worth a read, too