Quote from: astralNow where I was going with my discussion:The wave particle duality of matter, in essence, matter is aware of being observed. Thereby changing characteristics accordingly.Back in the 1800's Thomas Young discovered the dual wave-particle nature of light. I was suggesting that the observable universe might have such abilities as well. Your original question was how could we observe light 93 million trillion light years away, and estimate the age of the universe so that light wouldn't have the time to travel that far. Whether light is a particle or wave doesn't change that light travels at a constant speed in a vacuum, and we determine the traveled distance from its frequency. Given the vastness of space, and fundamental forces, I would guess it's a particle that behaves as a wave of energy. But hey that's just a guess : ). Checking the age versus distance is not straightforward because the space-time itself is expanding.An observation itself changing state at a quantom level is not related to observing the photons, their frequency and origin. Quantom level is really small, like parts of an atom, not detection method for distance.
Now where I was going with my discussion:The wave particle duality of matter, in essence, matter is aware of being observed. Thereby changing characteristics accordingly.Back in the 1800's Thomas Young discovered the dual wave-particle nature of light. I was suggesting that the observable universe might have such abilities as well.
How can it not be related to "observation", if that is how we perceive the events in discussion? And as I stated originally I was for the possibility that the universe could expand at a rate greater than that of light, hence the paradox of 13.5 billion year life, compared to 93 billion light year stage.
Because the observation changing state is at a quantom level, basically the opposite of something traveling from 93billion light years away, and calculating its distance on frequency.
One is a macro level and one is micro and they aren't related.
I was trying to have a legitimate discussion but thanks
The wave particle duality of matter, in essence, matter is aware of being observed. Thereby changing characteristics accordingly.Back in the 1800's Thomas Young discovered the dual wave-particle nature of light. I was suggesting that the observable universe might have such abilities as well.
who says the universe ever had to expand, maybe it has been and always will be this size for this particular universe, fact is no one has a real clue about the origins or life of the cosmosMy point about relativity and expansion, was that who says the fundamentals of the "observable" universe are bound to humans ideals and beliefs. Fact is that what we see might be a reflection of the "reality" we humans create continually while being alive, nothing more and nothing less. We might be "fooling" ourselves into thinking this is what the universe is(!), while in reality the universe isn't that way at all.
Speaking of moon rocks, I was watching something on the science channel the other day which stated that a majority of scientists believe that the moon was formed by floating debris all coalescing by means of gravity. I can't understand how they allow themselves to believe this. The moon is perfectly round and covered with craters, obvious evidence of meteor impacts. I have limited knowledge of things scientific, but I do know that rocks are not known to compact together and form solid spherical shapes like a liquid.
I was under the impression that volcanoes spewed molten burning rock, but how can anything burn without a presence of oxygen? The sun itself burns so hot that no oxygen could exist around it.
So like I've been saying all along, scientists obviously aren't as knowledgeable as they think.
Quote from: astral on August 31, 2011, 07:33:13 AMI was trying to have a legitimate discussion but thanks OK. Quote from: astral on August 31, 2011, 07:45:42 AMThe wave particle duality of matter, in essence, matter is aware of being observed. Thereby changing characteristics accordingly.Back in the 1800's Thomas Young discovered the dual wave-particle nature of light. I was suggesting that the observable universe might have such abilities as well. Granted, quantum behavior is really weird: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_eraserIncidentally, you may be interested in Richard Feynman's Quantum Electrodynamics: The Strange Theory of Light and Matter, in which Feynman explains it's possible to account for all the quantum behavior of light while treating it only as a particle, not as a wave.In any case:Quote from: astral on August 30, 2011, 01:22:45 PMwho says the universe ever had to expand, maybe it has been and always will be this size for this particular universe, fact is no one has a real clue about the origins or life of the cosmosMy point about relativity and expansion, was that who says the fundamentals of the "observable" universe are bound to humans ideals and beliefs. Fact is that what we see might be a reflection of the "reality" we humans create continually while being alive, nothing more and nothing less. We might be "fooling" ourselves into thinking this is what the universe is(!), while in reality the universe isn't that way at all.How is this different from saying: Who says an airfoil ever has to produce lift? Fact is, the lift produced might be a reflection of the "reality" we humans create continually while being alive.
No, it wasn't satirical. Apparently I'm fucking idiot and there's a perfectly reasonable explanation as to why a bunch of rocks floating around the earth would clump together in a separate sphere of lesser mass and gravity rather than clumping onto the earth which has more mass and gravity.
No wonder we're discussing this in the "religion" thread. My "opinion" is that they might not be 100% correct in their calculations.
My "opinion" is that maybe just because A=A on earth doesn't necessarily mean that A=A everywhere else (or that A has always equated to A on earth).
Our periodic table is more than likely just a minuscule fraction of the total elements in existence throughout the universe.
There could be other forces at work which we don't currently have the ability to understand or detect.
Consider all we’ve learned about the size, age, and contents of the universe—from its fiery birth in the big bang through fourteen billion years of expansion that has followed. Even better, consider the powerful laws of physics we’ve discovered that account for it all.Kind of makes you stand with pride for being human. But before you stand too tall, consider that, at the moment, we can account for only fifteen percent of all the gravity we’ve ever measured in the universe. We’re simply clueless about what’s causing the rest. Not only that, if you add up all the matter and energy in the universe, it comes to just four percent of all that drives cosmic expansion. So we’re clueless about that one, too, with no idea about what occupies the remaining ninety-six percent of the universe.We call these invisible entities “dark matter” and “dark energy.”What are they? Maybe they’re exotic, never-before-seen forms of matter and energy. Or maybe they reveal a hidden flaw in our understanding of how the universe works. But really, the two terms are placeholders for our abject ignorance. We could just as easily have labeled them “Bert” and “Ernie” or “Without-a-Clue A” and “Without-a-Clue B.”So we are left in a curious situation. What we know of the universe, we know well. Yet a larger cosmic truth lies undiscovered before us—a humbling, yet thrilling, prospect for the scientist—driven not only by the search for answers but by the love of questions themselves.
I do not have any more faith in the limited postulations of scientists than I do in the prophecies and histories proposed by religious fanatics.
chaulk me up on the relgiion side!
“…Lo! Those on whom ye call beside Allah will never create a fly though they combine together for the purpose. And if the fly took something from them, they could not rescue it from him. So weak are (both) the seeker and the sought!” [Quran 22:73]