For an observer moving toward a rod of some fixed length in a rest frame, the rod shrinks, but what happens when the observer is moving away from the rod, given that the gamma factor remains unchanged?
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> Given that already since Olaf Römer's observations of 1676 it has been known that light propagates at a finite speed, it would have been possible more than 300 years ago to conclude that objects moving at nearly the speed of light must look distorted. Surprisingly, no such conclusions have been drawn in the framework of classical physics.
On Sun, Sep 8, 2024 at 1:23 AM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:> Given that already since Olaf Römer's observations of 1676 it has been known that light propagates at a finite speed, it would have been possible more than 300 years ago to conclude that objects moving at nearly the speed of light must look distorted. Surprisingly, no such conclusions have been drawn in the framework of classical physics.True. They could also have concluded in 1676 that the universe must be a finite number of miles across, or created a finite number of years ago, or space itself must be expanding and so very distant stars must be moving away from us faster than the speed of light so the light from them will never reach us. I say that because if none of those three things were true then if you extended a line from you to any point on the sky it would eventually hit the center of a star, and so every point on the nighttime sky would be as bright as the sun. But that's not what we observe.
>> if you extended a line from you to any point on the sky it would eventually hit the center of a star, and so every point on the nighttime sky would be as bright as the sun. But that's not what we observe.
> As for the unobservable part of the universe, moving away at faster than light speed, I conjecture that Inflation is the cause.
> if we run the clock backward, they would eventually come back into view,
> I disagree with your final conclusion. Even if the universe is infinite, many stars that are directly in our line of sight, might be too faint to be seen, as is the case of nearby brown dwarf stars, which comprise 50% of stars in our relatively nearby neighborhood, but too faint to see.
On Sunday, September 8, 2024 at 6:45:59 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Sun, Sep 8, 2024 at 1:23 AM Brent Meeker <meeke...@gmail.com> wrote:> Given that already since Olaf Römer's observations of 1676 it has been known that light propagates at a finite speed, it would have been possible more than 300 years ago to conclude that objects moving at nearly the speed of light must look distorted. Surprisingly, no such conclusions have been drawn in the framework of classical physics.True. They could also have concluded in 1676 that the universe must be a finite number of miles across, or created a finite number of years ago, or space itself must be expanding and so very distant stars must be moving away from us faster than the speed of light so the light from them will never reach us. I say that because if none of those three things were true then if you extended a line from you to any point on the sky it would eventually hit the center of a star, and so every point on the nighttime sky would be as bright as the sun. But that's not what we observe.
As for the unobservable part of the universe, moving away at faster than light speed, I conjecture that Inflation is the cause. So if we run the clock backward, they would eventually come back into view, showing that the whole universe is finite, and therefore cannot be flat (which implies spatially infinite). AGI disagree with your final conclusion. Even if the universe is infinite, many stars that are directly in our line of sight, might be too faint to be seen, as is the case of nearby brown dwarf stars, which comprise 50% of stars in our relatively nearby neighborhood, but too faint to see. AG
On Sun, Sep 8, 2024 at 9:13 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> if you extended a line from you to any point on the sky it would eventually hit the center of a star, and so every point on the nighttime sky would be as bright as the sun. But that's not what we observe.
> As for the unobservable part of the universe, moving away at faster than light speed, I conjecture that Inflation is the cause.
I'm not talking about inflation, just the normal everyday expansion of the universe, which has been known since the mid-1920s, means that stars a finite distance away are moving away from us faster than the speed of light , and so the light from them will never reach us.
> if we run the clock backward, they would eventually come back into view,
Yes there are stars that we can see today that we won't be able to see tomorrow, 1 trillion years from now we won't be able to see any stars except those that are in the Milky Way because those stars are gravitationally bound together.
> I disagree with your final conclusion. Even if the universe is infinite, many stars that are directly in our line of sight, might be too faint to be seen, as is the case of nearby brown dwarf stars, which comprise 50% of stars in our relatively nearby neighborhood, but too faint to see.
Sirius A is the brightest star in the sky but it has a companion, Sirius B, which is hotter and, because the light emitted of a hot object is proportional to the size of the object and to the fourth power of the temperature, is much much brighter, and yet it is impossible to see unless you have a fairly large telescope. That is because although its light is very intense Sirius B is far smaller than Serious A. One has a diameter of about 1,000,000 miles while the other has a diameter of only 6800 miles, so even though it's very intense the total amount of light given off is much less than Sirius A.
On 9/9/2024 12:51 PM, John Clark wrote:
On Sun, Sep 8, 2024 at 9:13 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> if you extended a line from you to any point on the sky it would eventually hit the center of a star, and so every point on the nighttime sky would be as bright as the sun. But that's not what we observe.
> As for the unobservable part of the universe, moving away at faster than light speed, I conjecture that Inflation is the cause.
I'm not talking about inflation, just the normal everyday expansion of the universe, which has been known since the mid-1920s, means that stars a finite distance away are moving away from us faster than the speed of light , and so the light from them will never reach us.
> if we run the clock backward, they would eventually come back into view,
Yes there are stars that we can see today that we won't be able to see tomorrow, 1 trillion years from now we won't be able to see any stars except those that are in the Milky Way because those stars are gravitationally bound together.
And not just the Milky Way but also Andromeda, with which we will have collided by then, plus several small galaxies that are part of the local group. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_Group
> the rate of expansion of the universe appears to be increasing,
> is it increasing fast enough to cause galaxies in our local group to become part of the UNobservable universe?
> I conjecture that the UNobservable universe came into being with Inflation. If so, it must have been initially finite in spatial extent
> the rate of expansion of the universe appears to be increasing,Yes but even if the rate of expansion stopped increasing it would still be true that some galaxies we can see today we won't be able to see tomorrow.
> is it increasing fast enough to cause galaxies in our local group to become part of the UNobservable universe?We are already part of the unobservable universe to galaxies that we cannot see. None of the galaxies in the local group are moving away from us because the local group is gravitationally bound together, that is to say the mutual gravitational attraction between its members is strong enough to overcome the general expansion of the universe. But there are only about 80 galaxies in our local group, the three largest in order of size are Andromeda, the Milky Way and the Triangulum Galaxy. 77 are just dwarf galaxies. Except for those, all the other galaxies in the universe are moving away from us.> I conjecture that the UNobservable universe came into being with Inflation. If so, it must have been initially finite in spatial extentIf the entire universe, observable plus unobservable, is infinite today then it must've been infinite even before inflation started, it must've been infinite from the first Planck Time Instant of its creation. I think most cosmologists would say that at the largest level space is curved into some unknown shape but inflation has flattened it out so much the curvature is too small to ever be detected.
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 6:32:37 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:> the rate of expansion of the universe appears to be increasing,Yes but even if the rate of expansion stopped increasing it would still be true that some galaxies we can see today we won't be able to see tomorrow.But you haven't explained WHY that is the case. AG> is it increasing fast enough to cause galaxies in our local group to become part of the UNobservable universe?We are already part of the unobservable universe to galaxies that we cannot see. None of the galaxies in the local group are moving away from us because the local group is gravitationally bound together, that is to say the mutual gravitational attraction between its members is strong enough to overcome the general expansion of the universe. But there are only about 80 galaxies in our local group, the three largest in order of size are Andromeda, the Milky Way and the Triangulum Galaxy. 77 are just dwarf galaxies. Except for those, all the other galaxies in the universe are moving away from us.> I conjecture that the UNobservable universe came into being with Inflation. If so, it must have been initially finite in spatial extentIf the entire universe, observable plus unobservable, is infinite today then it must've been infinite even before inflation started, it must've been infinite from the first Planck Time Instant of its creation. I think most cosmologists would say that at the largest level space is curved into some unknown shape but inflation has flattened it out so much the curvature is too small to ever be detected.You're assuming what I'd like to see argued. Guth says Inflation started at t = 10^-35 seconds and the universe was around the size of a proton.
I think the huge expansion created the unobserved region since space must have expanded greater than the speed of light. AGThey used to say there was a strict relationship between the amount of mass/energy in the universe and its shape, if it was less than a certain figure it was positively curved like a sphere, if it was over that figured it was negatively curved like a saddle, and if it was EXACTLY at that figure it was flat; but after the discovery of Dark Energy things became a lot more complicated and they knew that simple relationship could not be true.By the way, there is some indication that Dark Energy is getting weaker and thus the acceleration of the universe is slowing down, but there's not enough evidence to claim a discovery and get a Nobel prize; it only has 3.9 sigma, enough to be very exciting but you need at least 5 sigma to claim a discovery. If that turns out to be true then all bets are off and we have no idea what the distant future will be like, for all we know after Dark Energy drops to zero it may turn negative and Dark Energy might start slowing down the expansion of the universe. Nobody knows.ba0
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>> even if the rate of expansion stopped increasing it would still be true that some galaxies we can see today we won't be able to see tomorrow.> But you haven't explained WHY that is the case. AG
>> If the entire universe, observable plus unobservable, is infinite today then it must've been infinite even before inflation started, it must've been infinite from the first Planck Time Instant of its creation. I think most cosmologists would say that at the largest level space is curved into some unknown shape but inflation has flattened it out so much the curvature is too small to ever be detected.> You're assuming what I'd like to see argued.
> Guth says Inflation started at t = 10^-35 seconds and the universe was around the size of a proton.
> I think the huge expansion created the unobserved region since space must have expanded greater than the speed of light. AG
On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 9:43 AM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> even if the rate of expansion stopped increasing it would still be true that some galaxies we can see today we won't be able to see tomorrow.> But you haven't explained WHY that is the case. AGEven if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.
>> If the entire universe, observable plus unobservable, is infinite today then it must've been infinite even before inflation started, it must've been infinite from the first Planck Time Instant of its creation. I think most cosmologists would say that at the largest level space is curved into some unknown shape but inflation has flattened it out so much the curvature is too small to ever be detected.> You're assuming what I'd like to see argued.In the above what specifically do you think I'm assuming?
> Guth says Inflation started at t = 10^-35 seconds and the universe was around the size of a proton.I'm certain Guth meant the size of the OBSERVABLE universe was the size of a proton at 10^-35 seconds. But if the entire universe, observable plus unobservable, is infinite now then it must've been infinite then. Nobody knows if the universe is finite or infinite.
>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.
> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,
> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,
hwt
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Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.Quentin
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinThat's the conventional wisdom but what is the physical mechanism? Hubble discovered that the universe was expanding faster in the past, than in the present. Now its rate of expansion is much slower, allowing us to see many distant galaxies. What is the physical mechanism that will cause its present expansion rate to increase to greater than c
--, so distant galaxies will be beyond our field of view? AGhwt--
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Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 00:06, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinThat's the conventional wisdom but what is the physical mechanism? Hubble discovered that the universe was expanding faster in the past, than in the present. Now its rate of expansion is much slower, allowing us to see many distant galaxies. What is the physical mechanism that will cause its present expansion rate to increase to greater than cThe expansion rate can still be the same or even slow down that my explanationis still valid, no need for the *expansion rate* to change for current objects near the horizon to soon recess at more than c.
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 10:51:22 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 00:06, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinThat's the conventional wisdom but what is the physical mechanism? Hubble discovered that the universe was expanding faster in the past, than in the present. Now its rate of expansion is much slower, allowing us to see many distant galaxies. What is the physical mechanism that will cause its present expansion rate to increase to greater than cThe expansion rate can still be the same or even slow down that my explanationis still valid, no need for the *expansion rate* to change for current objects near the horizon to soon recess at more than c.You haven't explained anything. You're just repeating what you've heard or read. A long time ago Brent explained it as a purely geometric result of the expansion, but now I tend to doubt that explanation. Specifically, if a galaxy now relatively close and visible but due to the expansion moves, say, into a region where the recessional velocity HAD BEEN some multiple of its recessional velocity when relatively near the Milky Way, why does its recessional velocity increase? AG
----, so distant galaxies will be beyond our field of view? AGhwt--
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To be clearer, imagine you have points drawn on the surface of a balloon. As you inflate the balloon, the distance between two points increases, even though the points themselves aren't moving across the surface of the balloon. The farther apart the points are initially, the faster they seem to be moving away from each other as the balloon inflates. Similarly, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the faster its recession velocity, but this velocity is due to the expansion of space itself, not because the galaxy is moving through space.Quentin
On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 12:41:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:To be clearer, imagine you have points drawn on the surface of a balloon. As you inflate the balloon, the distance between two points increases, even though the points themselves aren't moving across the surface of the balloon. The farther apart the points are initially, the faster they seem to be moving away from each other as the balloon inflates. Similarly, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the faster its recession velocity, but this velocity is due to the expansion of space itself, not because the galaxy is moving through space.QuentinIf we imagine two separated galaxies on the equator of an expanding sphere, the distance between them increases as the sphere expands. But the light from either will reach the other, unless the distance is increasing faster than c. How does your model guarantee that the distance is increasing faster than c? AG
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Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:14, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 12:41:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:To be clearer, imagine you have points drawn on the surface of a balloon. As you inflate the balloon, the distance between two points increases, even though the points themselves aren't moving across the surface of the balloon. The farther apart the points are initially, the faster they seem to be moving away from each other as the balloon inflates. Similarly, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the faster its recession velocity, but this velocity is due to the expansion of space itself, not because the galaxy is moving through space.QuentinIf we imagine two separated galaxies on the equator of an expanding sphere, the distance between them increases as the sphere expands. But the light from either will reach the other, unless the distance is increasing faster than c. How does your model guarantee that the distance is increasing faster than c? AGBecause the expansion is continuous as long as expansion rate is > 0, sooner or later distant object will receed faster than c.
Chatgpt:The reason distant objects eventually recede faster than the speed of light (c) is due to the continuous and large-scale expansion of the universe. As long as the expansion rate is positive (which it is, and even accelerating due to dark energy), the space between us and sufficiently distant objects will eventually increase faster than c. This isn't because these galaxies are moving through space faster than light, but because the space between us and them is expanding at such a rate.
Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.Quentin
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On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinThat's your claim, but, like I wrote, if say, the rate of expansion is fixed, the separation distance isn't increasing faster than c. It's just increasing. AG
--hwt--
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Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.Quentin
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinBecause Inflation hugely accelerated the initial expansion, much much greater than c, what Hubble discovered is that the rate of expansion increases as we go backward in time, but is slower today. AG
--hwt--
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Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:42, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinThat's your claim, but, like I wrote, if say, the rate of expansion is fixed, the separation distance isn't increasing faster than c. It's just increasing. AGJust take the balloon example, it's a perfect explanation, any two points receed faster from each other as the balloon inflates.
On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 1:44:39 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:42, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinThat's your claim, but, like I wrote, if say, the rate of expansion is fixed, the separation distance isn't increasing faster than c. It's just increasing. AGJust take the balloon example, it's a perfect explanation, any two points receed faster from each other as the balloon inflates.If the rate of expansion is fixed, the distance along some equator containing two separated galaxies increases linearly as a function of the radial distance, s. So I don't see what you claim your model proves. AG
----hwt--
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Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.Quentin
On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinProve it, if you can. I see the separation distance increasing linearly as the radius of the sphere expands, so light can reach either galaxy, from either galaxy. AG
--hwt--
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Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:56, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 1:44:39 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:42, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:
On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.
> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.
Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.
> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,
NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,
What the hell?!
How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AG
The farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.
Quentin
That's your claim, but, like I wrote, if say, the rate of expansion is fixed, the separation distance isn't increasing faster than c. It's just increasing. AG
Just take the balloon example, it's a perfect explanation, any two points receed faster from each other as the balloon inflates.
If the rate of expansion is fixed, the distance along some equator containing two separated galaxies increases linearly as a function of the radial distance, s.
--So I don't see what you claim your model proves. AG
You're correct that, with a fixed rate of expansion, the distance between two galaxies increases linearly as a function of time. However, the key point is that recession velocity depends on the distance between the galaxies.
Using the balloon analogy: imagine two points on an inflating balloon. Even if the balloon expands at a constant rate, the farther apart the points are, the faster they move away from each other. This means the rate at which the distance between the two points increases is proportional to how far apart they are. So, as the distance between galaxies grows, their recession velocity increases.
In an expanding universe, the same thing happens: even if the expansion rate is constant, galaxies that are farther apart recede faster. At large enough distances (like beyond the Hubble radius), the recession velocity will exceed the speed of light because the space between the galaxies is expanding faster.
So, while the distance may increase linearly with time, the recession velocity still increases with distance, and at sufficiently large distances, it exceeds . This is how galaxies beyond a certain distance can recede faster than the speed of light, even with a constant rate of expansion.--
--
hwt
--
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Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 10:08, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinProve it, if you can. I see the separation distance increasing linearly as the radius of the sphere expands, so light can reach either galaxy, from either galaxy. AGTo address your point about the linear increase in distance, here's how distant galaxies can still recede faster than the speed of light, even with constant expansion:1. Hubble’s Law:Hubble’s Law shows that the recession velocity (v) of a galaxy depends on its distance (d) from us:v = H0 * dWhere H0 is the expansion rate. This means that as the distance increases, the recession velocity increases proportionally.
2. Linear increase in distance:You're right that, with a constant expansion rate, the distance between two galaxies increases linearly with time. However, because recession velocity depends on distance, the farther apart two galaxies are, the faster they recede from each other. So, even if the distance grows linearly, the recession velocity grows proportionally with distance.
3. Hubble Distance:The key point is the Hubble distance:d_H = c / H0At distances greater than this, the recession velocity exceeds the speed of light (c). This doesn't violate relativity, as it's the space between galaxies that expands faster than c, not the galaxies moving through space.
On 9/11/2024 1:02 AM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:56, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 1:44:39 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:42, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:
On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.
> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.
Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.
> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,
NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,
What the hell?!
How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AG
The farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.
Quentin
That's your claim, but, like I wrote, if say, the rate of expansion is fixed, the separation distance isn't increasing faster than c. It's just increasing. AG
Just take the balloon example, it's a perfect explanation, any two points receed faster from each other as the balloon inflates.
If the rate of expansion is fixed, the distance along some equator containing two separated galaxies increases linearly as a function of the radial distance, s.No, the distance between two galaxies carried by the Hubble expansion increases exponentially.
The problem, AG, is that you put no effort at all into understanding or researching your on your own.
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 10:08, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:
On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.
> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.
Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.
> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,
NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,
What the hell?!
How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AG
The farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.
Quentin
Prove it, if you can. I see the separation distance increasing linearly as the radius of the sphere expands, so light can reach either galaxy, from either galaxy. AG
To address your point about the linear increase in distance, here's how distant galaxies can still recede faster than the speed of light, even with constant expansion:
1. Hubble’s Law:Hubble’s Law shows that the recession velocity (v) of a galaxy depends on its distance (d) from us:v = H0 * dWhere H0 is the expansion rate. This means that as the distance increases, the recession velocity increases proportionally.
--
2. Linear increase in distance:You're right that, with a constant expansion rate, the distance between two galaxies increases linearly with time. However, because recession velocity depends on distance, the farther apart two galaxies are, the faster they recede from each other. So, even if the distance grows linearly, the recession velocity grows proportionally with distance.
3. Hubble Distance:The key point is the Hubble distance:d_H = c / H0At distances greater than this, the recession velocity exceeds the speed of light (c). This doesn't violate relativity, as it's the space between galaxies that expands faster than c, not the galaxies moving through space.
4. Analogy of the balloon:Think of two points on the surface of an inflating balloon. As the balloon expands at a constant rate, the distance between the points increases linearly. However, if the points are far enough apart, they will move away from each other faster than a closer pair of points. Similarly, in the universe, even though the expansion rate is constant, galaxies farther apart recede faster due to their increasing distance.
5. Why light can’t reach us:For galaxies beyond the Hubble distance, the space between us expands faster than light, meaning their light can never reach us. This is why galaxies eventually move out of our observable universe.
In summary, even with a linear increase in distance due to constant expansion, the recession velocity increases with distance, and for sufficiently distant galaxies, this velocity eventually exceeds c.
--
hwt
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On 9/11/2024 1:02 AM, Quentin Anciaux wrote:
No, the distance between two galaxies carried by the Hubble expansion increases exponentially.
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:56, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 1:44:39 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 09:42, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:
On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.
> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.
Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.
> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,
NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,
What the hell?!
How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AG
The farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.
Quentin
That's your claim, but, like I wrote, if say, the rate of expansion is fixed, the separation distance isn't increasing faster than c. It's just increasing. AG
Just take the balloon example, it's a perfect explanation, any two points receed faster from each other as the balloon inflates.
If the rate of expansion is fixed, the distance along some equator containing two separated galaxies increases linearly as a function of the radial distance, s.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/everything-list/84d50e17-bd0c-417f-b3f6-cfcb3c87741d%40gmail.com.
--3. Hubble Distance:The key point is the Hubble distance:d_H = c / H0At distances greater than this, the recession velocity exceeds the speed of light (c). This doesn't violate relativity, as it's the space between galaxies that expands faster than c, not the galaxies moving through space.Looking backward in time, you get a result which follows from an initially HUGE expansion greater than c, and then a slowing down due to gravity. But using Hubble's law leads to a questionable result going forward IMO. AG4. Analogy of the balloon:Think of two points on the surface of an inflating balloon. As the balloon expands at a constant rate, the distance between the points increases linearly. However, if the points are far enough apart, they will move away from each other faster than a closer pair of points. Similarly, in the universe, even though the expansion rate is constant, galaxies farther apart recede faster due to their increasing distance.5. Why light can’t reach us:For galaxies beyond the Hubble distance, the space between us expands faster than light, meaning their light can never reach us. This is why galaxies eventually move out of our observable universe.In summary, even with a linear increase in distance due to constant expansion, the recession velocity increases with distance, and for sufficiently distant galaxies, this velocity eventually exceeds c.--hwt--
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--3. Hubble Distance:The key point is the Hubble distance:d_H = c / H0At distances greater than this, the recession velocity exceeds the speed of light (c). This doesn't violate relativity, as it's the space between galaxies that expands faster than c, not the galaxies moving through space.Looking backward in time, you get a result which follows from an initially HUGE expansion greater than c, and then a slowing down due to gravity. But using Hubble's law leads to a questionable result going forward IMO. AG4. Analogy of the balloon:Think of two points on the surface of an inflating balloon. As the balloon expands at a constant rate, the distance between the points increases linearly. However, if the points are far enough apart, they will move away from each other faster than a closer pair of points. Similarly, in the universe, even though the expansion rate is constant, galaxies farther apart recede faster due to their increasing distance.5. Why light can’t reach us:For galaxies beyond the Hubble distance, the space between us expands faster than light, meaning their light can never reach us. This is why galaxies eventually move out of our observable universe.In summary, even with a linear increase in distance due to constant expansion, the recession velocity increases with distance, and for sufficiently distant galaxies, this velocity eventually exceeds c.--hwt--
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Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.Quentin
On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinInstead of preaching the Gospel, why don't you try to justify Brent's equation to prove your point, if you can. I see the distance separation along the equator for two separated galaxies as linear as the radius of the sphere expands. Brent uses Hubble's law, but the proof of what you claim shouldn't depend on Hubble, but just the geometry. AG
--hwt--
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On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.
> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:23, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinInstead of preaching the Gospel, why don't you try to justify Brent's equation to prove your point, if you can. I see the distance separation along the equator for two separated galaxies as linear as the radius of the sphere expands. Brent uses Hubble's law, but the proof of what you claim shouldn't depend on Hubble, but just the geometry. AGI did multiple times with the balloon analogy which is purely geometrical, see previous answers.
On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 3:26:01 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:23, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinInstead of preaching the Gospel, why don't you try to justify Brent's equation to prove your point, if you can. I see the distance separation along the equator for two separated galaxies as linear as the radius of the sphere expands. Brent uses Hubble's law, but the proof of what you claim shouldn't depend on Hubble, but just the geometry. AGI did multiple times with the balloon analogy which is purely geometrical, see previous answers.I don't think so. You just asserted it. AG
--hwt--
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----hwt--
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> For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast?
> You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AG
> "The farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon".
> Hubble discovered that the universe was expanding faster in the past, than in the present.
Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:49, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 3:26:01 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:23, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinInstead of preaching the Gospel, why don't you try to justify Brent's equation to prove your point, if you can. I see the distance separation along the equator for two separated galaxies as linear as the radius of the sphere expands. Brent uses Hubble's law, but the proof of what you claim shouldn't depend on Hubble, but just the geometry. AGI did multiple times with the balloon analogy which is purely geometrical, see previous answers.I don't think so. You just asserted it. AGThe equation that links distance and recession velocity in both cases comes from the same geometric principles of uniform expansion in space. The proportionality between distance and velocity is a natural consequence of how expansion works, whether it’s on a 2D surface like a balloon or in 3D space like our universe.The expansion of the balloon and the universe follow similar dynamics because, in both cases, the expansion is homogeneous (the same everywhere) and isotropic (the same in all directions).If you mark two points close to each other on the balloon and start inflating it, those two points will move apart slowly. However, if you mark two points farther apart, they will move away from each other much more quickly as the balloon expands.
--In the same way, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the more space there is between us and that galaxy. Since each portion of space is expanding, more distant galaxies experience the cumulative effect of the expansion over several portions of space. This means that for a galaxy at a great distance, the total expansion of space is larger, which results in a higher recession velocity.--hwt--
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> For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast?What the hell?> You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGWhat the hell? Quentin gave the correct answer to both of your questions:> "The farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon".Alan, that is something they would teach you on the very first day of an astronomy 101 class if you hadn't already learned it in high school, which makes your previous two questions even more bizarre. You should have at least a little understanding of the basics of classical physics before you start worrying about the subtleties of the metric tensor in General Relativity.
In the same way, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the more space there is between us and that galaxy. Since each portion of space is expanding, more distant galaxies experience the cumulative effect of the expansion over several portions of space. This means that for a galaxy at a great distance, the total expansion of space is larger, which results in a higher recession velocity.
--hwt--
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----In the same way, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the more space there is between us and that galaxy. Since each portion of space is expanding, more distant galaxies experience the cumulative effect of the expansion over several portions of space. This means that for a galaxy at a great distance, the total expansion of space is larger, which results in a higher recession velocity.--hwt--
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Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:49, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 3:26:01 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:23, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinInstead of preaching the Gospel, why don't you try to justify Brent's equation to prove your point, if you can. I see the distance separation along the equator for two separated galaxies as linear as the radius of the sphere expands. Brent uses Hubble's law, but the proof of what you claim shouldn't depend on Hubble, but just the geometry. AGI did multiple times with the balloon analogy which is purely geometrical, see previous answers.I don't think so. You just asserted it. AGThe equation that links distance and recession velocity in both cases comes from the same geometric principles of uniform expansion in space. The proportionality between distance and velocity is a natural consequence of how expansion works, whether it’s on a 2D surface like a balloon or in 3D space like our universe.The expansion of the balloon and the universe follow similar dynamics because, in both cases, the expansion is homogeneous (the same everywhere) and isotropic (the same in all directions).If you mark two points close to each other on the balloon and start inflating it, those two points will move apart slowly. However, if you mark two points farther apart, they will move away from each other much more quickly as the balloon expands.
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Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:49, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 3:26:01 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mer. 11 sept. 2024, 11:23, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 3:50:08 PM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:Le mar. 10 sept. 2024, 23:19, Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> a écrit :On Tuesday, September 10, 2024 at 2:19:42 PM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:On Tue, Sep 10, 2024 at 3:57 PM Alan Grayson <agrays...@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even if you ignore Dark Energy and postulate that the Hubble constant really is constant, every object a megaparsec away (3.26 million light-years) is moving away from us at about 70 kilometers per second. So if you try to look at objects a sufficiently large number of megaparsec away you will fail to find any because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light.> That was in the past. At present, the universe is expanding at about 70 km/sec.Galaxies are receding from the Earth at 70 km/sec for EACH megaparsec distant from Earth they are. The further from Earth they are, the faster they are moving away from us, so if they are far enough away they will be moving faster than the speed of light away from us.> You're assuming the universe today is infinite,NO! I said IF the entire universe is infinite today then it was always infinite, and IF it was finite 10^-35 seconds after the Big Bang then it's still finite today. I also said nobody knows if the entire universe is infinite or finite.> Hubble's law applies to the past, not to the future,What the hell?!How about an intelligent reply? Obviously, if the universe is infinite today, it was always infinite. But that's what I am questioning. For galaxies to fall out of view, they have to moving at greater than c. Now they aren't receding that fast. How will they start moving that fast? You're applying Hubble's law without thinking what it says. Just because a galaxy is now receding at less than c, how will continued expansion increase that speed to greater than c? AGThe farther they are the faster they are receding from you, so as they continue to get farther away they receed faster from you till the point they receed faster than c and go out of your horizon.QuentinInstead of preaching the Gospel, why don't you try to justify Brent's equation to prove your point, if you can. I see the distance separation along the equator for two separated galaxies as linear as the radius of the sphere expands. Brent uses Hubble's law, but the proof of what you claim shouldn't depend on Hubble, but just the geometry. AGI did multiple times with the balloon analogy which is purely geometrical, see previous answers.I don't think so. You just asserted it. AGThe equation that links distance and recession velocity in both cases comes from the same geometric principles of uniform expansion in space. The proportionality between distance and velocity is a natural consequence of how expansion works, whether it’s on a 2D surface like a balloon or in 3D space like our universe.The expansion of the balloon and the universe follow similar dynamics because, in both cases, the expansion is homogeneous (the same everywhere) and isotropic (the same in all directions).If you mark two points close to each other on the balloon and start inflating it, those two points will move apart slowly. However, if you mark two points farther apart, they will move away from each other much more quickly as the balloon expands.
--
In the same way, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the more space there is between us and that galaxy. Since each portion of space is expanding, more distant galaxies experience the cumulative effect of the expansion over several portions of space. This means that for a galaxy at a great distance, the total expansion of space is larger, which results in a higher recession velocity.--
hwt
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C'mon AG put some effort into understanding.
On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 4:44:43 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
What the hell? Do you think things are proven from nothing. You've apparently never proven a theorem in you life. "The phenomena" of maximum observable distance is a consequence of Hubble's law, which is an empirical observation...not an axiom of Euclid.This is what you keep claiming, but have yet to offer a mathematical proof. Try this; two galaxies on the equator of a sphere, with a separation distance s, and the equator expanding as a function of its radius r to simulate expansion. The recessional velocity is ds/dt, which depends on dr/dt. If dr/dt is constant, so will be ds/dt, and the recessional velocity is constant and cannot reach c or greater. What is wrong with this proof, falsifying Hubble's law and your model? AGHHubble's law says the recession velocity is proportional to the distance so ds/dt=Hs whose solution is s=c*exp(Ht) So s is not constant and r is not constant. What is constant is H=(1/s)*ds/dt.
The phenomenon depends only on geometry, not on Hubble's law. Can you prove it without Hubble's law? AG
C'mon AG put some effort into understanding.
Have you googled "chakra"? They're part of your body, but TOTALLY UNCONSCIOUS! AG
Brent
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In the same way, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the more space there is between us and that galaxy. Since each portion of space is expanding, more distant galaxies experience the cumulative effect of the expansion over several portions of space. This means that for a galaxy at a great distance, the total expansion of space is larger, which results in a higher recession velocity.--
hwt
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On Wednesday, September 11, 2024 at 4:44:43 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
This is what you keep claiming, but have yet to offer a mathematical proof. Try this; two galaxies on the equator of a sphere, with a separation distance s, and the equator expanding as a function of its radius r to simulate expansion. The recessional velocity is ds/dt, which depends on dr/dt. If dr/dt is constant, so will be ds/dt, and the recessional velocity is constant and cannot reach c or greater. What is wrong with this proof, falsifying Hubble's law and your model? AGHHubble's law says the recession velocity is proportional to the distance so ds/dt=Hs whose solution is s=c*exp(Ht) So s is not constant and r is not constant. What is constant is H=(1/s)*ds/dt.The phenomenon depends only on geometry, not on Hubble's law. Can you prove it without Hubble's law? AG
C'mon AG put some effort into understanding.
Have you googled "chakra"? They're part of your body, but TOTALLY UNCONSCIOUS! AG
Brent
--
In the same way, in the universe, the farther away a galaxy is, the more space there is between us and that galaxy. Since each portion of space is expanding, more distant galaxies experience the cumulative effect of the expansion over several portions of space. This means that for a galaxy at a great distance, the total expansion of space is larger, which results in a higher recession velocity.--
hwt
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But how do you know the separation distances are what you claim?
Try this. s = r * theta, where s is arclength between two galaxies, r is the radius of some circle on which two galaxies are situated, and theta is the angle subtended by s. Then ds/dt = dr/dt * (theta) + r * d(theta)/dt. ds/dt is the recessional velocity. dr/dt is the rate of expansion. The terms on the RHS are both positive and increasing even if dr/dt is constant since r is increasing, while d(theta)/dt is also increasing as the galaxies separate. So eventually ds/dt will exceed the velocity of light as long as r is increasing. Any flaws in my logic? AG
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On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 2:40:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:I just gave you a full proof that as long as the expansion is uniform and expansion rate > 0, then it follows objects will sooner or later recess from each other at speed > c.
What was the justification for the geometric progression? I made no such assumption in my "proof".
Not absolutely sure it's correct, but it seems to show the velocity of separation continues as the universe expands. We more or less already knew that. AG
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I just gave you a full proof that as long as the expansion is uniform and expansion rate > 0, then it follows objects will sooner or later recess from each other at speed > c.
I prefer this method. s = r * theta, where s is the arclength or separation distance of two galaxies residing on a circle of radius r, where theta is the angle subtended by s. Differentiating, ds/dt = dr/dt * theta + r * d(theta)/dt. Even if the expansion rate, dr/dt, is constant, the RHS is positive since the second term must be positive based on the physical assumption that d(theta)/dt must be positive (since the arclength s must be increasing as the universe expands). So, eventually, ds/dt will exceed the velocity of light, the condition that the galaxies will lose contact. Any flaws in this logic? AG
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That's backwards. theta represents a fixed point on the expanding balloon universe so dtheta/dt=0 and all the change is in r the scale of the universe. Assuming expansion is constant means dr/dt=Hr where H is Hubble's observed constant.
Brent
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 2:40:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:I just gave you a full proof that as long as the expansion is uniform and expansion rate > 0, then it follows objects will sooner or later recess from each other at speed > c.What was the justification for the geometric progression? I made no such assumption in my "proof".As explained multiple times and in the quote you made, expansion is uniform and happens at every point in space.
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On 9/12/2024 9:21 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 3:55:45 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 2:40:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
I just gave you a full proof that as long as the expansion is uniform and expansion rate > 0, then it follows objects will sooner or later recess from each other at speed > c.
What was the justification for the geometric progression? I made no such assumption in my "proof".
As explained multiple times and in the quote you made, expansion is uniform and happens at every point in space.
What bothers me about your method is that you assume a geometric increase in the separation distance, when, IMO, that's the variable that must be calculated (which I did). So no matter how many times you affirm your proof as valid, I can't agree. AG
You didn't calculate the expansion parameter, which is the Hubble constant. It's an observed value.
Brent
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On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 11:00:21 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 9/12/2024 9:21 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 3:55:45 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 2:40:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
I just gave you a full proof that as long as the expansion is uniform and expansion rate > 0, then it follows objects will sooner or later recess from each other at speed > c.
What was the justification for the geometric progression? I made no such assumption in my "proof".
As explained multiple times and in the quote you made, expansion is uniform and happens at every point in space.
What bothers me about your method is that you assume a geometric increase in the separation distance, when, IMO, that's the variable that must be calculated (which I did). So no matter how many times you affirm your proof as valid, I can't agree. AG
You didn't calculate the expansion parameter, which is the Hubble constant. It's an observed value.
BrentWhy must I do that, when I just want to show that eventually the recessional velocity exceeds c? Also, I don't see why theta is fixed, when the end of the arc defines the position of the receding galaxy. AG
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 11:07:49 PM UTC-6 Alan Grayson wrote:On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 11:00:21 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 9/12/2024 9:21 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 3:55:45 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 2:40:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
I just gave you a full proof that as long as the expansion is uniform and expansion rate > 0, then it follows objects will sooner or later recess from each other at speed > c.
What was the justification for the geometric progression? I made no such assumption in my "proof".
As explained multiple times and in the quote you made, expansion is uniform and happens at every point in space.
What bothers me about your method is that you assume a geometric increase in the separation distance, when, IMO, that's the variable that must be calculated (which I did). So no matter how many times you affirm your proof as valid, I can't agree. AG
You didn't calculate the expansion parameter, which is the Hubble constant. It's an observed value.
BrentWhy must I do that, when I just want to show that eventually the recessional velocity exceeds c? Also, I don't see why theta is fixed, when the end of the arc defines the position of the receding galaxy. AGNow I am not sure I proved the recessional velocity is greater than c, after some time has passed. If the sphere is expanding, then the distance between any two fixed points on the sphere will increase as time passes. But that was obvious due to the expansion. What's wrong, if anything? AG
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 11:00:21 PM UTC-6 Brent Meeker wrote:
On 9/12/2024 9:21 PM, Alan Grayson wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 3:55:45 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
On Thursday, September 12, 2024 at 2:40:56 AM UTC-6 Quentin Anciaux wrote:
I just gave you a full proof that as long as the expansion is uniform and expansion rate > 0, then it follows objects will sooner or later recess from each other at speed > c.
What was the justification for the geometric progression? I made no such assumption in my "proof".
As explained multiple times and in the quote you made, expansion is uniform and happens at every point in space.
What bothers me about your method is that you assume a geometric increase in the separation distance, when, IMO, that's the variable that must be calculated (which I did). So no matter how many times you affirm your proof as valid, I can't agree. AG
You didn't calculate the expansion parameter, which is the Hubble constant. It's an observed value.
Brent
Why must I do that, when I just want to show that eventually the recessional velocity exceeds c? Also, I don't see why theta is fixed, when the end of the arc defines the position of the receding galaxy. AG