The Silverdale Phantom
Referee
- Messages
- 20,749
Wasn't many photos or footage of it ?It's moving further away now. December was its closest point to Earth, which even that wasn't particularly close, and it's now continuing on its merry way. Ne'er to return.
As a new member yet to comment on my team the mighty Sydney Roosters, I found this question up my alley, as being a member of a science forum also and an interest in cosmology. Firstly, the evidence that the universe is expanding, was first discovered by Edwin Hubble, with the redshift of distant galaxies. While this is a cosmological redshift, (spacetime expanding rather then galaxies physically moving away) It is also the same reason Doppler redshift works, and is put in practise with Police speed cameras. The opposite of course is blue shift. A car moving towards a speed camera, is doppler blue shifted. we do not see that with cosmology and galaxies moving towards us over large scales. Over smaller scales though, our galaxy, our group of galaxies and even the wall of galaxies to which we belong, then gravity overcomes the spacetime expansion rate.eg: Andromeda, M31, is moving towards our galaxy the Milky Way and will merge with us in around 2 billion years. Other evidence for the expansion of the universe over large scales, is the abundance of lighter elements, like hydrogen and helium, and the CMBR, or Cosmic Microwave Background radiation, or the left over heat of the big bang, which sits at this time at 2.7 Kelvin. The abundance of lighter elements is due to their manufacture just after the big bang itself. All other elements were synthesised when the hydrogen and helium collapses under gravity, ignited at their cores, with the creation of our first stars. When stars go nova, or supernova, they create great pressures and temperatures that go into manufacturing all the other elements. All the elements in your body was manufactured in the belly of stars, that went supernova and spewed their guts into the cosmos. The other query I noticed asked, was where did the big bang come from. To that question, the answer is we don't know. The big bang itself is a scientific theory of the universe/spacetime evolving, (not an explosion as the name may suggest) from a hot dense state, and from 10-45 seconds after the actual event. The third point worth mentioning is a scientific theory. A scientific theory is not an idea or theory you or I may pull out of one's arse. A scientific theory is based on evidence and is our best idea at any specific time. It always remains a scientific theory, so that if further data and evidence, may see that theory re-enforced, added to, modified some, or even scrapped. Scientific theories while many held in high regard, are never set in stone.I was going to ask @Everlovin' Antichrist or anyone else who is astronomical.
So Hubble said the whole show is expanding and the expansion is speeding up.
I was trying to work out where they said it started relative to our Sun?
Also, is the acceleration a constant or do different chunks of the universe go faster?
Also, If we accept the Big Bang, how could something come from nothing? Surely there was something at the start of the mess?
It just doesn’t make any sense to me that a couple of atoms or whatever just materialises from the void.
I know stranger things have happened like the signing of Packer for $850k, and I’m not putting up anything creationist, but I’m a tad uncomfortable with this explanation.
Any insights appreciated.
Thanks.
Yep sure does! The Milky way orbits about the center of gravity, or barycenter of our local group of galaxies which include M31 or Andromeda.Cheers.
Is the Milky Way also orbiting around something?
While we have no real evidence of anything before 10-45th seconds post big bang, (this is called the quantum/Planck level and is where all our laws of physics and general relativity fail us) we do have some educated speculation. This can be explained by the big bang being the evolution of spacetime, as we know them. Before that was spacetime at the quantum level or as known 'QUANTUM FOAM". This may have been what has always existed (near virtually nothing) and from whence the big bang arose, due to a quantum fluctuation in the quantum foam. But again, essentially speculation rather then a scientific theory.. The other query I noticed asked, was where did the big bang come from. To that question, the answer is we don't know. The big bang itself is a scientific theory of the universe/spacetime evolving, (not an explosion as the name may suggest) from a hot dense state, and from 10-45 seconds after the actual event. The third point worth mentioning is a scientific theory. A scientific theory is not an idea or theory you or I may pull out of one's arse. A scientific theory is based on evidence and is our best idea at any specific time. It always remains a scientific theory, so that if further data and evidence, may see that theory re-enforced, added to, modified some, or even scrapped. Scientific theories while many held in high regard, are never set in stone.
And our galaxy including Sag: A of course, is orbiting about a barycenter of our local group of galaxies, including M31 or Andromeda.Yep its orbiting around a huge black hole called Sagittarius A. There is documentary about on Netflix Black Holes The Edge of what we know.
@Generalzod any Jupiter for my iPhone?
Carl Sagan, in my opinion, the greatest educator of our time. The pale blue dot narrative should be compulsory learning in school, everywhere.
The numinous - sense of wonder - where science and poetic prose combine …. I love it …. In small doses.Carl Sagan, in my opinion, the greatest educator of our time. The pale blue dot narrative should be compulsory learning in school, everywhere.
My telescope isn't for planetry photos you can see it but it way to small.@Generalzod any Jupiter for my iPhone?
The movie Contact is awesome.Carl Sagan, in my opinion, the greatest educator of our time. The pale blue dot narrative should be compulsory learning in school, everywhere.
I'll tell you one thing about the universe, though. The universe is a pretty big place. It's bigger than anything anyone has ever dreamed of before. So if it's just us... seems like an awful waste of space. Right? Ellie Arroway:The movie Contact is awesome.
