I really would like to know
what are the most accepted theories regarding the size and shape of the universe?
Whoever understand of physics and care to explain please do.
Whoever understand of physics and care to explain please do.
I just did.Originally posted by Ohkrana
As for the size of the universe? I don't think anyone would dare estimate.
Originally posted by Ohkrana
The next problem is..The Universe is expanding but in what way?
1. Expanding to infinitum - in which case we could possibly 'see' the heat death of the universe? In X trillions of years..nobody really knows.
2. Will it expand to some predefined limit then contract and collapse in on itself only to initiate another big bang?
Orginally posted by Matrix
This is the beginning that almost every big scientist agrees about. The trouble is: what's the current situation? The universe is believed to exist for about 10 billion years. If the universe still expands with it's original speed it should have a size of about......400E+24 cubic meter (400.000.000.000.000.000.000.000.000 cubic meter).
Asking me about physics would be like asking a cocker spaniel what time it is, but I recently read about astronomers now saying the universe is MUCH bigger than ever previously thought.
Originally posted by Switch625
The Ekpyrotic Model of the universe is an emerging challenger to the "Big Bang" theory. Fact is, I just learned about this model earlier today from another thread on this very site. Anyway, I can't claim to truly understand everything being put forth by this new theory, so you'll have to follow the link and try to figure it out for yourself. From what I do catch, in this model there was no initial singularity for the universe, our universe was created by the collision of two 3D "membranes" that exist within a 5D space. I'm not going to try to explain it any further than that, I'm still digesting it myself. Follow the link and take a look.
They would be able to map out star-systems at increadible distance, however the maps would be obsolete as they are made.
The light takes so many millions of years to get here, the star that made it would have moved, or may already be gone.
Actually, yes. We have observed other universes indirectly, via their interaction with stellar bodies. Across an event horizon, the laws of this universe are not obliged to be followed. It gets kindof esoteric, but the same is true across the event horizon of the original creation of the universe, presuming the observations indicating a common origin point of the observable universe are borne out. One cannot track time back past this point, and across this horizon, in fact, one cannot even pose the question of what came before, as it is not connected to what came after. All in all, physics of the last 35 years has made remarkable strides to the account of creation in Genesis.Now, we have no evidence at all of there being more to the universe than what we can observe. If someday we can observe more, that doesn't disprove our belief that it is finite.