Structures of Universes
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message
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Starman Universes in the cosmos is the way to go.(best terminology)
There are more universes in the cosmos than flakes of snow in an endless
storm.Like snow flakes each has its own spacetime(time frame) All have
the exact same structure. All share and contribute to the gravitation of
the intrinsic gravity.of space. Someday this gravity will be the key to
letting us know they are out there. Just like black holes gravity is the
big clue they are out there. bert
Beeeert, I don't mean to give you a hard time, but what evidence spawns your
idea that there are "unlimited" universes, all of them identical ??
We cannot even see the edge of our present universe, since we are limited by
the light-gathering ability of even the most modern telescopes. We can
discern structures that are approximately 10B years old, but anything beyond
that is conjecture, at best. One guess is that the universe is 13.7 B years
old, but that is a fickle number, since we don't know at what point the
universe started to speed up its expansion and if it is linear or
exponential. A fraction of a variance can make a difference of huge
proportions.
The smallest composite particle we know of is the atom. Our solar system
can be likened to an atom, the Sun is the nucleus and the thingies zipping
around it are the planets (electrons). The Galaxy is the same on a much
grander scale, the BH at its center is the nucleus and all the solar systems
in orbit around it are the "electrons". On a larger scale yet, there are
the Galaxy clusters, then the visible universe, but it all is in circular
motion, but basically a mass, orbiting a nucleus. Present day technology
limits us to the atom in the microcosm and the Universe in the macro world,
but there is nothing that forbids it to go on forever, in both directions,
sort of like Mandelbrot fractals, which in theory have no beginning or end.
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