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#1
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The Sky is so Large
Our Earth is so small. Our galaxy is so small. The distance from our
galaxy to Adromida is so short etc. As our photon detectors get more sensitive the universe gets bigger and bigger. Our planet can only last another 4.5 billion more years,and that begs the question "Will we have time to see the universe's horizon?" Bert |
#2
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The Sky is so Large
What if our universe's horizon is like a black hole event horizon. Only
using accelerating expansion faster than the speed of light. Here again we see accelerating motion,and gravity so relative to each other. Bert |
#3
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The Sky is so Large
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Our Earth is so small. Our galaxy is so small. The distance from our galaxy to Adromida is so short etc. As our photon detectors get more sensitive the universe gets bigger and bigger. Our planet can only last another 4.5 billion more years,and that begs the question "Will we have time to see the universe's horizon?" Bert Yes, we will see the universe's horizon. Our technology is better than we think. |
#4
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The Sky is so Large
G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote: What if our universe's horizon is like a black hole event horizon. Only using accelerating expansion faster than the speed of light. Here again we see accelerating motion,and gravity so relative to each other. Bert Perhaps our universe is a black hole in a much vaster hyperspace universe, which is in turn a black hole in an even vaster hyper-hyper space universe, etc., etc., etc.! Double-A |
#5
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The Sky is so Large
Double-A wrote: G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote: What if our universe's horizon is like a black hole event horizon. Only using accelerating expansion faster than the speed of light. Here again we see accelerating motion,and gravity so relative to each other. Bert Perhaps our universe is a black hole in a much vaster hyperspace universe, which is in turn a black hole in an even vaster hyper-hyper space universe, etc., etc., etc.! Double-A P.S. Have a shrinking feeling? |
#6
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The Sky is so Large
"Double-A" wrote in message oups.com... Double-A wrote: G=EMC^2 Glazier wrote: What if our universe's horizon is like a black hole event horizon. Only using accelerating expansion faster than the speed of light. Here again we see accelerating motion,and gravity so relative to each other. Bert Perhaps our universe is a black hole in a much vaster hyperspace universe, which is in turn a black hole in an even vaster hyper-hyper space universe, etc., etc., etc.! Double-A P.S. Have a shrinking feeling? What if our big bang(and resulting universe) are on the other end of a black hole. Super-massive black hole poop. LoL. |
#7
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The Sky is so Large
W live in the best of times. The universe's sky is just right as we here
on Earth look out beyond our solar system. Far out single stars are to faint to be resolved,but there are hundreds of billions of galaxies that will not change the view of the sky even when humankind has long disappeared from the universe. Still it is comforting to know we will keep the sky we we see today for the life time of mankind. We know what the end of the life of the sky will look like. It will be black. Black as a black hole. Galaxies with their dead stars 150 billion light years apart from each other. Space temperature 99.9999999999999999999 of absolute zero. So cold that space energy of its virtual and regular submicroscopic particles can just about combine. That is a plus. That is a time before a big bang. That is a spacetime that gives reality how nature can create universes without black holes. Space energy + gravity = the first big bang Bert. |
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