Study Finds the Universe Might Be 2 Billion Years Younger (apnews.com) 132
The universe is looking younger every day, it seems. New calculations suggest the universe could be a couple billion years younger than scientists now estimate, and even younger than suggested by two other calculations published this year that trimmed hundreds of millions of years from the age of the cosmos. From a report: The huge swings in scientists' estimates -- even this new calculation could be off by billions of years -- reflect different approaches to the tricky problem of figuring the universe's real age. "We have large uncertainty for how the stars are moving in the galaxy," said Inh Jee, of the Max Plank Institute in Germany, lead author of the study in Thursday's journal Science. Scientists estimate the age of the universe by using the movement of stars to measure how fast it is expanding. If the universe is expanding faster, that means it got to its current size more quickly, and therefore must be relatively younger.
The expansion rate, called the Hubble constant, is one of the most important numbers in cosmology. A larger Hubble Constant makes for a faster moving -- and younger -- universe. The generally accepted age of the universe is 13.7 billion years, based on a Hubble Constant of 70. Jee's team came up with a Hubble Constant of 82.4, which would put the age of the universe at around 11.4 billion years. Jee used a concept called gravitational lensing -- where gravity warps light and makes far away objects look closer. They rely on a special type of that effect called time delay lensing, using the changing brightness of distant objects to gather information for their calculations. But Jee's approach is only one of a few new ones that have led to different numbers in recent years, reopening a simmering astronomical debate of the 1990s that had been seemingly settled.
The expansion rate, called the Hubble constant, is one of the most important numbers in cosmology. A larger Hubble Constant makes for a faster moving -- and younger -- universe. The generally accepted age of the universe is 13.7 billion years, based on a Hubble Constant of 70. Jee's team came up with a Hubble Constant of 82.4, which would put the age of the universe at around 11.4 billion years. Jee used a concept called gravitational lensing -- where gravity warps light and makes far away objects look closer. They rely on a special type of that effect called time delay lensing, using the changing brightness of distant objects to gather information for their calculations. But Jee's approach is only one of a few new ones that have led to different numbers in recent years, reopening a simmering astronomical debate of the 1990s that had been seemingly settled.
So 4000 (Score:2)
in God years?
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:So 4000 (Score:4, Interesting)
Tiresome. Origen of Alexandria was clear on the metaphorical nature of "6 days" in the third century, and he wasn't the first.
Young Earth Creationism is a dogmatic position is a recent phenomenon.
Re: So 4000 (Score:2)
Re: So 4000 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Really? I'm not Evangelical, but I've never heard this construction. "Literal Word of God"? Sounds like a Straw Man setup deliberate misrepresentation of what Christians supposedly say to me.
"Word of God"? Yes. "Literal Word of God"? Inaccurate on very cursory examination, to the degree every single Christian, Evangelical or not, should already be absolutely clear on its misrepresentation from the start, for the reasons already stated.
Beyond that, naturally, the debate on how literal particular parts
Re: (Score:3)
Really? I'm not Evangelical, but I've never heard this construction. "Literal Word of God"? Sounds like a Straw Man setup deliberate misrepresentation of what Christians supposedly say to me.
"Word of God"? Yes. "Literal Word of God"? Inaccurate on very cursory examination, to the degree every single Christian, Evangelical or not, should already be absolutely clear on its misrepresentation from the start, for the reasons already stated.
Beyond that, naturally, the debate on how literal particular parts of the Bible may be, is much wider. And I think regardless of one's stance on that, the construction, say, "True Word of God" would be appropriate, and that I've heard as well.
"Literal Word of God", no. Anyone using that construction I think should be getting as much pushback from informed Christians as from atheists.
Look, it takes about 30 seconds of Googling to see you're wrong. A huge number of Americans take the Bible as the literal word of God, with the holy ghost inducing the authors to write the divine truth (and presumably the translators to exactly and correctly express the meaning, I guess). No one is saying it's correct, but it's a very common belief in American evangelical protestantism. I see you've tried to move the goalpost by saying "informed Christians", but even so, a lot of preachers preach this and p
Re: (Score:2)
Then produce the "googling" that shows what you claim, so we can discuss specifics. If it's polls, you can't take that as a reliable indicator of anything. The unreliability of using a particular phrasing of an actual issue, and giving 5 seconds for an immediate response, is well established.
As for the actual position, rather than a characterization, more accurate is to as a given Christian "Do you think there will be a literal red dragon chasing a pregnant woman in the end times, or do you think that's a
Re: (Score:3)
Take a look at Ken Ham's Creation Museum [youtube.com] for example.
Obviously it is not all Christians who think like that, the one guy who was driving his care states this even in the video. But thanks to testaments like that museum we know that at least Ken Ham wants to convince people to think like this. And if you remember the debate between Ken Ham and Bill Nye, it's not like Ken Ham is a nut job without a fanbase to back him up.
Hence there certainly are those among Chri
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
If it's polls, you can't take that as a reliable indicator of anything.
Are you claiming all polls about everything are meaningless? Or only polls that produce results you personally dislike?
Re: (Score:2)
You're playing the No-True-Scotsman game now.
How much more time do we need to waste discussing this when it's been thoroughly destroyed by Matt Dillahunty, Sam Harris, Christopher Hitchens just to name a few. It's over. You're gonna die. Make your own life count.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
"Adults who say their holy scripture is the word of God and should be taken literally"
Mainline Protestant: 12%
Okay, you are right. 12% isn't "nobody". Except for the expectations of anyone reading English when someone says colloquially "nobody... X".
Horrible phrasing of the question, though. It is both the Word of God and not all of it should be taken literally. The parts that shouldn't be, generally speaking, as completely obvious as knowing when in Orwell's Animal Farm the political point isn't that
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, no, there's massive evidence.
Here's some peer-reviewed evidence from the most authoritative medical journal in the world, to start:
https://www.thelancet.com/jour... [thelancet.com]
Additional information on historical predictions very improbably being fulfilled, and endless personal testimonies, is available for the price of Googling.
You want God to show up and prove it to you? You want, in effect, to be forced to convert by that happening?
God generally keeps your choice a choice, for multiple important reasons. If yo
Re: (Score:2)
Rather than just spouting nonsense you parrot from Dawkins, let's note the fact that per actual authorites on the matter, e.g. psychologists, it is by definition impossible for a view held by the majority of one's culture to be a metal illness. We're at 2.2 billion people. They are not all mentally ill, and claiming so just makes you an obvious idiot.
Check the DSM.
Re: (Score:2)
Aw proselytizing. Speaking down to me in the most humble of ways when I am more educated on the subject matter than you are. Thank you for the priceless lesson in humility. I challenge you to watch this [youtube.com].
Cheers though. Ultimately, you're just afraid of death. You're not interested in being a good person or being enlightened. You all just want a place to go when you die. That's your narcissistic ego. Good luck with that.
For bonus points, why the fuck are you proselytizing and not adhering to Matthew 6
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You aren't remotely more educated on this issue. You've demonstrated yourself an ignorant fool.
Following that idiocy up with claiming psychic powers to know my motivations isn't making you any less of one.
Matthew 6:6 has nothing to do with Christian advocacy. That's prayer. Be able to understand basic words. You're adding embarrassingly to your idiot count.
Matthew 7:1, that is a warning against hypocrisy, not against rational judgment. I am "judging" you, and fully accepting I will by "judged" in the s
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, the idiocy of "psychologizing" your opponents argument and characterizing the person, rather than the argument, is a really old form of ad hominem, not improved by reference to erroneous psychology.
Dawkins parrots can do no other to try to mask their void of knowledge, though.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
"Your Theory of Mind cognitive skill is sorely lacking. You see, this is the problem with the Dunning Kruger effect."
Babble on by gluing together memes to claim nonsense is valid. Won't change anything.
But to shorten this useless discussion, particularly since your position is of no -possible- wider value if true (if there's no God, your position offers nothing), and it utterly depends on mine to have anything at all to say, I'll just wait and let evolution eliminate you.
Fair enough.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Holy Ghost? Hmmm....sounds like an occult influence to me. Soon the Evangelicals will be reading Harry Potter and discovering they can do miracles.
Re: (Score:2)
Really? I'm not Evangelical, but I've never heard this construction. "Literal Word of God"? Sounds like a Straw Man setup deliberate misrepresentation of what Christians supposedly say to me.
If you're an American or living in the United States, you must either be living under a rock or on the west coast. Regrettably, I live in the Bible belt and I can tell you that it's 100% legit. I'm actually assuming you're a troll because the tradition stretches back to the Puritans that settled Massachusetts, basically Mennonites.
Re: (Score:3)
https://news.gallup.com/poll/1... [gallup.com]
Three in 10 Americans interpret the Bible literally, saying it is the actual word of God. That is similar to what Gallup has measured over the last two decades, but down from the 1970s and 1980s.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
You are in good company of course, but remember that screaming "science!11!!!1!" does not make you win arguments, if you do not know what science is and how it works. This is probably another example of that absurd partisanship that is so common nowadays (e.g. Democrats vs. Republicans, like it is some football match), where someone cheer for a camp and pretend to be right just by association with that camp. However this kind of tribalism is i
Re: (Score:2)
Name calling can also be a sign of exasperation from having to deal with stupidity (or liars), however in this case, it's an either or.... he either naively believes his bullshit to be true because he hasn't been paying attention to reality for the last 100 years, or he knows he's wrong and is simply lying. The fact that he doubles down after he's been shown to be wrong means he's probably lying.
Read the thread. It has nothing to do with science, or even the topic of the post... it has
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
... And the phrase at question, for very specific reasons, is "Literal Word of God", which appears nowhere in your link.
Insulting BS removed...
In this poll [pewforum.org] if we read the questions asked (pg. 16) we see that first they were asked "Which comes closest to your view?", with the first two options being "[Holy book] is the word of God, OR [Holy book] is a book written by men and is not the word of God", and then they were asked as a separate question if they answered "[Holy book] is the word of God" which was "[Holy book] is to be taken literally, word for word, OR Not everything in [Holy book] should be taken literally, word for word".
55% of Evangel
Re: (Score:2)
Nobody says the Bible is "God's literal word" except atheists trying to set up a Straw Man. Leaving Genesis aside,
Oh [answersingenesis.org] yeah [drdino.com]?
Re: (Score:2)
Nobody says the Bible is "God's literal word" except atheists trying to set up a Straw Man.
Atheists mostly do it as a way of pointing out that Christians feel free to interpret every single line of The Bible in a way that suits them.
Seriously: Wouldn't an omnipotent god who's interested in getting every last soul have written a better book?
Re: So 4000 (Score:2)
The six day creation and the genealogy was indeed taught as being literally true when I was growing
Re: So 4000 (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Just promise to think of me in return, as evolution performs its 100% guarantee of eliminating you and making your rant irrelevant to anything, forever.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: So 4000 (Score:3)
You'd be wrong. As an atheist I'd be more fearfull of dying in a Christian world and being judged. As a nihilist I'm not scared of the fact that I came from nothing and return to nothing. I don't have any need to attach meaning to the bit in between, and although I enjoy it I have nothing to worry about when it's over.
I'd suggest, in fact, that you're projecting.
Re: (Score:2)
Your default reaction as a biological organism is to be afraid. I guarantee when you are about to die, you will be afraid.
Absurd claims to the contrary for the sole purpose of projection onto Christians what they explicitly do not have cause to feel, and you do, as a matter of logic, will not alter that.
When you find your ability to breathe ceasing, you will be afraid, and your asserting to yourself it's "just you returning to nothing" won't change that one bit.
Re: So 4000 (Score:2)
By your own logic the claim that you won't fear death is equally absurd. You're going round in circles.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Christian (Score:2)
Yeh. Blah blah. The exceptionalism of the christian. There isn't even a discussion to be had here.
Re: (Score:3)
Christians have a hell, atheists don't.
Christians have a heaven, atheists don't.
Christians have both more to hope for, and more to fear.
Pascal's wager was always idiotic, though. If God is omniscient, then God knows whether you actually believe, or are just going through the motions.
Re: (Score:2)
Young Earth Creationism is a dogmatic position is a recent phenomenon.
You mean, like Scientology? Praise Xenu!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
And it's particularly amusing seeing the average Slashdot denizen reacting by suggesting that Phys.org is some kind of hotbed of Trump Evangelical rednecks.
Re: So 4000 (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Sure, and it is all of these darned astrophysicists with their "gravitational lensing' allowing them to see further, thereby forcing the simulation to generate more information to feed them and thusly making the Universe seem to be expanding faster...
Yeah, that's gonna run up a bill and get flushed out pretty quick, particularly if it impacts something of interest to whatever is running the simulation. I find your determination that the period of time of "the last 5000 years" would be of any particular inte
Typtical woman . . . (Score:2)
. . . the universe lies about her age.
Re: (Score:2)
. . . the universe lies about her age.
Usually it's the other way around...
Re: Typtical woman . . . (Score:1)
Claim to be older? Lucky you.
Anyways the other part is more interesting: How she swells up faster than we knew.
Typical I guess.
Re: (Score:2)
Claim to be older? Lucky you.
That's what the story says, the Universe claimed to be older.
Re: (Score:2)
An age lies about the universe?
I suppose the Stone Age had some bad information about the universe....
Re: (Score:2)
. . . the universe lies about her age.
Finally! A new thread...
Well.... a few more studies.... (Score:1)
and we'll get it down to 6 days!
And then a LOT more people will be happy!
(I happen to think the "days" mentioned in the bible are allegorical for (periods of creation), and I think the sequence shown in the Bible is a good pattern for what is necessary for life to be established here. But then again, I'm also a fan of panspermia as well. I mean, look at how carefully we're looking at other "local" life-capable planets.)
Re: (Score:2)
There are two creation myths in Gensis, written by two different authors. The first was the one G-d dictated, the second was the one G-d dictated with the preface, "Um, um, um (G-d's a stutterer)...I may have made a Biden or Trump in remembering what I did and when I did it...write this down instead...and no sneaky telling anyone I might have misrembered...All Powerful here, I have a rep to uphold!"
And we care why? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I know there is something important here. But it been a while since studies like these are guessing the age. Is it really news worthy any more?
These studies are not "guessing" the age of the universe. They are performing rational analysis of observational evidence to determine that age.
Is it newsworthy? Hell yes, for the same reason that discoveries of exoplanets, black holes, the Higgs boson, gravity waves, and countless other things are newsworthy. The universe is an extremely cool place, full of intriguing puzzles and mysteries. It's hardly surprising that we as a species want to spend some of our time and talent studying it.
Re: And we care why? (Score:2)
For the general layperson going about their daily lives it would seem to neither be news nor important to anything one would encounter. Its kind of like computing another digit of Pi, when most of the world stops caring after 3.14. The universe
A Brief Story Of Time (Score:2)
Re: A Brief Story Of Time (Score:3)
Time was better in the old days. Nowadays it just tastes like chicken.
Re: (Score:2)
The bigger mystery (Score:4, Interesting)
Is why in on breath scientists say all matter in universe is moving away from all other matter while we know, for example, that Milky Way & Andromeda galaxies are moving in a manner that will yield a collision,
What gives?
Re: (Score:2)
Scientists did not say "all matter in universe is moving away from all other matter".
Expansion means distance between distant parts of the universe is increasing with time. That expansion doesn't change distance in bound systems such as from Sun to Earth, or distance and movement of galaxies in the Local Group (which includes Milky Way and Andromeda) which are bound by gravity.
There are all kinds of photographs of colliding galaxies, and evidence of past collisions of the Milky Way with other galaxies nea
Re: The bigger mystery (Score:2)
My theory, with no real facts behind it, is that the expansion could be a local phenomenon. For example, throw a stone into a river and you get a wave moving away from the impact. The river is still flowing towards the sea, but to a fish near the stone the energy is expanding away from the point of impact.
I guess my problem with the big bang is that it doesn't answer any questions about what exists outside. But then again I'm no physicist.
Re: The bigger mystery (Score:2)
Currently we do not have the ability to measure the entire area of "the universe". Nor do we have the ability to account for every object and interaction in the Universe, to establish that there might be something outside of it at all. Dark Matter is a thing, it could be in part evidence of what exists outside the universe, though that is unlikely.
We humans are a curious folk, we seek answers, but that doesn't mean we have them, or will have th
Re: (Score:2)
Re:The bigger mystery (Score:5, Interesting)
It does seem to be a paradox and it's an often-asked and thoughtful question. It shows you're thinking.
The Milky Way and Andromeda are, indeed, on a collision course. Appreciate that they are in close proximity to each other. That's the answer to your question.
LOCALLY, across the universe, objects like galaxies close to each other, yield to mutual gravitation. The attraction is strong because the two are close (2.5 million light-years apart). So, the two are merging.
However, the universe as a whole is expanding.
From a great distance "out there," it looks like both the Milky Way and Andromeda are about in the same spot and flying away.
Re: (Score:2)
Well said ...
In addition to that, the expansion is that not that matter is moving apart, it is space time itself that is expanding. Imagine a 1 x 1 grid that is expanding to 2 x 2 grid. Picture a surface of a balloon that you drew dots on, and then blew some air in it, and now the dots are further apart, because the surface of the balloon is what expanded. The same is true for space time.
At a small scale (cosmologically speaking), things are held together by gravity. That is true in the Solar system, Milky
Re: (Score:3)
It shows he either hasn't been paying attention, ...
There are only two responses -- yours and mine. You didn't answer. You don't know if s/he paid attention to mine.
... or he has a complete lack of understanding of the basics.
So what? When we lack a complete understanding of the basics, we ask questions.
The question is in my wheelhouse. S/he more than likely a solid expert in another matter and has no reason to "pay attention." S/he did, however, understand the paradox enough to ask a question.
--
You're a boor. You added no new information, you insulted the person, and you exhibited absolutely no knowledge of the matt
Re: (Score:3)
Is why in on breath scientists say all matter in universe is moving away from all other matter while we know, for example, that Milky Way & Andromeda galaxies are moving in a manner that will yield a collision,
What gives?
All matter that is not gravitationally bound, and thank goodness for that otherwise we would slowly drift away from the planet
You are confusing expansion with local movement (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Is why in on breath scientists say all matter in universe is moving away from all other matter ....
Because they don't.
Re: (Score:2)
"All" is a generalization, not an exact quantitative statement.
Re: (Score:2)
I saw two cars collide the other day. Maybe they meant something else.
Re: (Score:1)
Don't drink and ponder the universe at the same time.
Re: (Score:1)
Because Trump purchased Andromeda. It was cheaper than Greenland.
Only a serious note, I don't believe scientists said "all" matter was moving away. It's a large-scale phenomenon, but local scale forces can still overpower the expansion's effects.
Establishing distance is hard ... (Score:2)
... we've used "standard candles" like Cepheid variable stars that, generally, give off the same light wherever they are. We can use that information to examine them close and far away and, based on predicted luminosity, figure out how far some galaxies are.
In truth, all Cepheid variables are not precisely, exactly the same, so it's a little sloppy and it works pretty well but things get hairy with distance. So that method has a distance limit.
We know that the further away galaxies are from us, the faster t
Different expansion speeds (Score:2)
Reminds me (Score:2)
Re: Reminds me (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
What does navigating space probes have to do with what I said? Estimating the "age of the universe" when we're still not sure what the universe is, if it even begins or ends, why it's expanding, etc; is quite different than well established mathematics. Every time we push back the boundary between what we're sure of and what we speculate about, science gains. But there's always that area a bit further out on our map marked "Here be Dragons". The map itself seems to never end. Astronavigation was conquered a
Why all the fuss (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
If here are older sentient species, the universe may have had some work done. There are still some very peculiar measured events in the universe that do not have reliable explanations, and it's been fascinating to speculate which of them might be caused by civilizations taming and tapping resources of stars or of galactic center black holes.
Except ... that it's not. (Score:5, Informative)
So actually the title should be "New preliminary calculations show that the Universe is either older or younger than we currently know, but the error is so big that it actually doesn't say anything" - but who would've clicked on such a title.
Re: (Score:2)
I can see where this is going (Score:1)
Fundamentalist mouthbreathers asserting that it's only a matter of time until science agrees the universe is 6,000 years old in three...two...one...
Re: (Score:2)
Studying Fundamentalism is a great way to understand human nature. When Jesus alive, he said he'd be back before the current generation went tits up, however he expressed it a bit differently. Anyhow, after that generation was up, the next generation said "so he's off by a few years, big deal". When that generation went away, the Fundies said that Jesus was a metaphysical sort of chap, so he was taking metaphorically...as opposed to literally everywhere else.
His claim that he was the Son of G-d was a common
do not disturb Dr Karl Popper (Score:2)
Every time you say something about stuff happening billions years ago he turns in his grave.
No, that makes no sense. (Score:3)
The furthest objects in the universe that we can see are over 13 billion light years away. How can we see them if the light hasn't had time to reach us yet?
If these objects are actually closer than that, then that would *reduce* the Hubble constant, not increase it, wouldn't it?
Re: (Score:2)
The furthest objects in the universe that we can see are over 13 billion light years away. How can we see them if the light hasn't had time to reach us yet?
At such extremes, astrophysics gets a little bit circular in its reasoning. Nobody is actually measuring the distance to the furthest objects. Nobody is measure any distance that large. What people are measuring is brightness, and attempting to generalize based on brightness of apparently similar objects that are much closer.
Age of the universe and farthest distances are all based on brightness measurements which we're slowly learning aren't nearly as reliable as people have liked to claim for the last 1
So how does this affect dark matter estimates? (Score:3)
So how does this affect estimates about dark matter?
With the universe substantially younger the galaxies are closer and thus smaller for a given visual width, but the velocity toward/away from us as measured by doppler shift doesn't change. So you'd need less dark matter to explain the apparently anomalous fast orbit.
Is there an estimate of the age of the universe / Hubble constant where the need for dark matter (beyond expected cold normal matter) goes away? Or are there other measurements (such as anomalous DISTRIBUTION of mass within a galaxy) that still require it or something like it.
Re: (Score:2)
The 4 billion mark is very little to go on but it's all we have to go on. Probability speaking even with a sample of one, it's pro
Re: (Score:2)
So how does this affect estimates about dark matter?
For most evidence, nothing. Galactic rotation curves, velocity dispersions, gravitational lensing all are on scales smaller than Hubble expansion would have much effect and would be dwarfed by the effects given to dark matter. It might be part of the cosmic microwave background radiation but I doubt it. The only independent way that we have seen evidence of dark matter that this would effect would be standard candle distances and that is a calculation with dark energy and normal matter, and highly doubtful
Re: (Score:1)
Universe identifies as six year old girl
But is really an FBI agent