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Tech Head - The Technology Section
Einstein's Alcove
The Big Bang ??
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<blockquote data-quote="Terryl" data-source="post: 977529" data-attributes="member: 369937"><p>The universe as we see it is only 32 billion light years across, (look one way you see 16 billion light years, look the other way and again you see 16 billion light years) this is as far back in time as we can look, it goes even further back then that as we have seen very very very faint blue shifted spots on the exposures sent down from the Hubble. (currently our only visible image source for this)</p><p></p><p>And Einstein was right for his time, the speed of light was a wall that could not be broken, however new discovery's in sub atomic particles have proven this barrier or speed limit to be wrong, there is one that I know of (forgot the name of it, brain too old) that has been detected to be a bit faster then light, it is a very very very short life span particle, it has been detected in large particle accelerators and it's life span has been measured.</p><p></p><p>However this particle has also been detected as being created in high energy collisions on the edge of our atmosphere, now due to it's very short life span it should not be able to reach the ground detectors when created 200 miles or more above the Earth as due to it's very short life span it should not be able to reach the ground, only explanation is that it can exceed the so called light speed barrier.</p><p></p><p>And what is light, a photon, it supposedly does not have any mass, this is how it can travel at the so call speed of light, well if it does not have any mass then how can light exert any form of pressure on any object?</p><p></p><p>Look at the little toy light vanes, the little things inside a glass bubble with a high vacuum in it, shine a light on it and it starts moving, if a photon does not have any mass then how can it move something as massive as the photon light vane?</p><p></p><p>And to the big bang, this may have only been a local occurrence in a very larger part of what some are now calling the multiverse, just because we haven't detected the end of out local universe doesn't mean that there is not something even bigger out there.</p><p></p><p>Who knows we may be a very very very small subatomic universe in a larger place that we can't even imagine right now. </p><p></p><p>OK too much coffee, time for a nap.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Terryl, post: 977529, member: 369937"] The universe as we see it is only 32 billion light years across, (look one way you see 16 billion light years, look the other way and again you see 16 billion light years) this is as far back in time as we can look, it goes even further back then that as we have seen very very very faint blue shifted spots on the exposures sent down from the Hubble. (currently our only visible image source for this) And Einstein was right for his time, the speed of light was a wall that could not be broken, however new discovery's in sub atomic particles have proven this barrier or speed limit to be wrong, there is one that I know of (forgot the name of it, brain too old) that has been detected to be a bit faster then light, it is a very very very short life span particle, it has been detected in large particle accelerators and it's life span has been measured. However this particle has also been detected as being created in high energy collisions on the edge of our atmosphere, now due to it's very short life span it should not be able to reach the ground detectors when created 200 miles or more above the Earth as due to it's very short life span it should not be able to reach the ground, only explanation is that it can exceed the so called light speed barrier. And what is light, a photon, it supposedly does not have any mass, this is how it can travel at the so call speed of light, well if it does not have any mass then how can light exert any form of pressure on any object? Look at the little toy light vanes, the little things inside a glass bubble with a high vacuum in it, shine a light on it and it starts moving, if a photon does not have any mass then how can it move something as massive as the photon light vane? And to the big bang, this may have only been a local occurrence in a very larger part of what some are now calling the multiverse, just because we haven't detected the end of out local universe doesn't mean that there is not something even bigger out there. Who knows we may be a very very very small subatomic universe in a larger place that we can't even imagine right now. OK too much coffee, time for a nap. [/QUOTE]
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Einstein's Alcove
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