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Old June 29th 08, 04:37 PM posted to alt.astronomy,sci.astro,sci.astro.amateur,alt.sci.physics.new-theories
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Default Superior limit to Universe extension

On 29 Giu, 11:06, "nospam" wrote:
wrote in ...
Hi to All,
concerning the universe extension is it possible to assume that the
maximum distance between two points in the Universe is
3.14*13.7billion light years?
Explanation:
in the earth the max distance between 2 points (e.g. north pole and
south pole) is one half the ring, i.e. 3.14*r (r=earth ray). In the
universe speed material cannot exceed the light one, so the universe
cannot have an extension higher than it's age, always travelling to
it's maximum speed... the light one...
What do you think about that?


That idea has been all but disproven. *It's widely believed that the
universe expanded at much greater speeds than C when it was very
young.

Google universe inflation for more info, e.g.:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_inflation


Thanks, that's sound good.
Unfortunately no speed limit monitoring probes that day :-)