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Old May 17th 13, 03:59 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Brad Guth[_3_]
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Posts: 15,175
Default Speed of light surpassed?

On May 16, 12:18*pm, "G=EMC^2" wrote:
On May 15, 8:01*pm, Double-A wrote:

On May 14, 6:03*pm, wrote:


I was watching a show the other night hosted by Stephen Hawking, about the
universe since it's creation up until now. I thought it was very well done is as
much as I could actually understand most of it. But one thing was mentioned, and
I wish I had written the numbers down, and that was that at so many seconds
after the big bang, the universe was already so many thousands of light years
across. I thought...HUH? If that were the case, then the universe, at that
point, would have had to have been moving faster than the speed of light. to get
that big is such a small span of time. Can anyone shed any light on this or
should I have written the numbers down? Thanks.


http://www.amazon.com/Inflationary-U...p/0201328402/r...


Double-A


AA It those never found thyrons. *No usefull information will ever
come out of anything or actions going fazster than c.TreBert


Except quantum communications via entangled photons seen to not be 'c'
limited.