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Following on from m4tty's speed of electicity question.
This one has bugged me for years. It's all about astronomy and the big bang.
Bear with me and I'll take my thought process in stages.
The big bang theory says everything originated from one point in space, then it all went bad day explode
Okay so far.
At that point in time, all the stars , planets etc (not that they had formed yet) started moving apart.
Fast forward to the present day. The universe is still expanding from that single point.
Astronomers can now look at very distant stars. So distant that the light has taken many thousands or millions of years to get here.
Okay so far.
But then there's the concept of the "observable universe" Beyond that, the light would have taken so long to get here, that it would have pre dated the big bang so would not have existed.
My brain is starting to ache.
So we appear to have stars so far away that the the light hasn't got here yet. (stars outside the observable universe)
My problem with comprehending this, is that seems to imply the stars in question, must be moving apart faster than the speed of light for that to be the case. but nothing travels faster than the speed of light.
Explain.
This one has bugged me for years. It's all about astronomy and the big bang.
Bear with me and I'll take my thought process in stages.
The big bang theory says everything originated from one point in space, then it all went bad day explode
Okay so far.
At that point in time, all the stars , planets etc (not that they had formed yet) started moving apart.
Fast forward to the present day. The universe is still expanding from that single point.
Astronomers can now look at very distant stars. So distant that the light has taken many thousands or millions of years to get here.
Okay so far.
But then there's the concept of the "observable universe" Beyond that, the light would have taken so long to get here, that it would have pre dated the big bang so would not have existed.
My brain is starting to ache.
So we appear to have stars so far away that the the light hasn't got here yet. (stars outside the observable universe)
My problem with comprehending this, is that seems to imply the stars in question, must be moving apart faster than the speed of light for that to be the case. but nothing travels faster than the speed of light.
Explain.
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