Le 31/03/12 21:07, Tyler Dresden a écrit :
> How many light years away is the expansion of Space expected to start?
> Also, At that point, would that not mean space time is not "Flat" any
> more?
OK.
Space "expands". But... into WHAT is space "expanding"?
Into more space obviously. Space expands into more space. But...
Was this space already there for the old space to be able to "expand"
into it?
Or it is created out of nothing?
Now you ask (no, I will not laugh)
How many light years away is the expansion of space?
How many light years of space you mean?
So, reformulating your question you are asking about the space that lies
between us and the space that is being swallowed by the new space?
:-)
Nobody has been able to answer conclusively what objects are pushed away
by the new space appearing out of nothing. We know that we aren't
expanding (even if I have weight problems, but that is another problem).
Humans do not expand. Nor the earth nor the solar system since the
orbits of the planets look stable. Nor the galaxy since it is a
gravitationally bound object.
Do galaxies in clusters expand? Apparently since redshift measurements
to other galaxies have an "expansion" already. Mr Hubble discovered the
redshift and the explanation advanced was the space expansion so
galaxies must be feeling the space expansion since a long time.
So, the answer should be that space expansion is several hundred
thousand light years away, more or less.
Or not? Should clusters of galaxies dissolve since the expansion of
space breaks them apart? Aren't the galaxies in there gravitationally bound?
Personally I am convinced that space "expansion" is absurd. Space can't
expand since "expansion" means an object increases its volume occupying
space previously empty. And space can't have more volume since it
encompasses ALL the volume there is.
BY DEFINITION of space.
All this conceptual problems are happily forgotten, and astronomers say
that:
https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~huchra/hubble/
the value is 160 KM/sec /million light years.
For a single light year this is:
160 000 meters / 1 million --> 16 cm
In one second 16 cm, in a year 5045.76 KM.
So, each second, a light year of space creates 16 cm of new space,
around 5Km each year. 5Km of real estate out of nothing. Isn't expansion
wonderful?