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Tech Head - The Technology Section
Einstein's Alcove
The Number of Galaxies in the Universe
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<blockquote data-quote="Terryl" data-source="post: 991725" data-attributes="member: 369937"><p>Well we can go on about this for years and years....Sounds like fun........The big bang, it created all we can see, 15 billion years, that's a long time, but were did that object that exploded and started the big bang come from?...Will there be a big crunch? And start all over again? Some say yes, some say no, and some say it didn't happen that way as matter just keeps popping into being and after a few billion years goes away.</p><p></p><p>We can only speculate as to what is going on, as all we can see is all we can comment on, until we can look into the subatomic world and see if there are really strings or even smaller stuff making up the stuff we can see we don't know.</p><p></p><p>There are even some that think that the so called big bang was a local thing, there are other places out there where the big bang hasn't happened yet, and places where the big crunch is just starting, all these places are further out then what our limited detection equipment can see, what if there was a major development in the detectors and all of a sudden we can see out to 100 billion years, what would we see, a ball of stuff or many other balls of stuff, or we just pushed the outer boundary out to 100 billion years.</p><p></p><p>This is fun, lets see how many can come up with other theory's.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Terryl, post: 991725, member: 369937"] Well we can go on about this for years and years....Sounds like fun........The big bang, it created all we can see, 15 billion years, that's a long time, but were did that object that exploded and started the big bang come from?...Will there be a big crunch? And start all over again? Some say yes, some say no, and some say it didn't happen that way as matter just keeps popping into being and after a few billion years goes away. We can only speculate as to what is going on, as all we can see is all we can comment on, until we can look into the subatomic world and see if there are really strings or even smaller stuff making up the stuff we can see we don't know. There are even some that think that the so called big bang was a local thing, there are other places out there where the big bang hasn't happened yet, and places where the big crunch is just starting, all these places are further out then what our limited detection equipment can see, what if there was a major development in the detectors and all of a sudden we can see out to 100 billion years, what would we see, a ball of stuff or many other balls of stuff, or we just pushed the outer boundary out to 100 billion years. This is fun, lets see how many can come up with other theory's. [/QUOTE]
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Tech Head - The Technology Section
Einstein's Alcove
The Number of Galaxies in the Universe
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