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How do you know that C is a constant? It's not (it travels at 0 in a black hole, right?)
except space is warped from gravity. And black holes have QUITE a bit of gravity. But you were talking about observing it? Who is to say it's not being absorbed entirely, as opposed to slowed?

I'm pretty sure Hammurabi was born maybe 1000 years after religious laws were at least being handed down through oral tradition.

Do you think animal troops don't have moral codes, such as "if you over throw the alpha, you are the new alpha?" or "if you attack her baby elephant, i'll fight back" Do you think the elephants and lions and tigers and bears have a god?
 
those two things are incompatable. respecting a view that is incompatable with yours makes no sense.

I don't know about that. The L*kers are incompatible with the Blazers, but we can still respect them.:dunno:
 
I'll leave this after reading Denny's post, but the equilibrium stuff I was talking about was this:

In all decay equations, you have to have some knowns. Decay constants are measurable and, well, constant (after some small fudge factor either way, but that's not really an issue). New technology allows for a much more accurate count of the radioisotopes you're looking for (C-14, in the cases we were talking about) than Liddy had in the 50's. We can measure the ratio of C-12 to C-14 in currently living organisms, but to project that back 5000 years (or billions, in the case of things like potassium-argon or thorium dating) you need to assume a few things:
Assumption 1: The original number of unstable atoms can be known. Scientists assume how many unstable (parent) atoms existed at the beginning based on how many parent and daughter atoms are left today.
Assumption 2: The rate of change was constant. Scientists assume that radioactive atoms have changed at the same rate throughout time
Assumption 3: The daughter atoms were all produced by radioactive decay. Scientists assume that no outside forces, such as flowing groundwater, contaminated the sample.
The one that I have the most trouble with is #2: that the earth is at equilibrium in its rates of formation and decay, and that it's been that way the entire time.
"If the cosmic radiation has remained at its present intensity for 20,000 or 30,000 years, and if the carbon reservoir has not changed appreciably in this time, then there exists at the present time a complete balance between the rate of disintegration of radiocarbon atoms and the rate of assimilation of new radiocarbon atoms for all material in the life-cycle." -Liddy
Those are some pretty large ifs, right? I mean, it's great that he had an assumption until proven invalid, but I think it has been. C-14 is NOT at equilibrium right now...in the 50's and 60's the amounts fluctuated significantly due to nuclear testing and such. If calibrated (and I'm not positive how that occurs, but I'll go with it), it seems to work for things at about 5000 years old (wasn't one of the original tests a log predicted accurately from a pharaoh's tomb or something?). But what isn't talked about much is that much of the stuff dated from King Tut's tomb were so far off that the Egyptologists dismissed Liddy's calculations.
We're told that you can make the case that it can detect atoms counts so accurately that you can go back 65k years or so (so approximately 1/(2^12) or 1/5000 of the original). But all that's assuming that the rates of C14 increase and decrease (and the ratios of C-12 to C-14) have been constant the entire time, when we know that they haven't even been constant over the last 50 years! Even without the curves, though, we're told by the scientists that the errors are only on the magnitude of 200-800 years, so that if something reads, say, 25000BC, then there's a 100% certainty that it's from 24000-26000BC. However, more recently others have tried to duplicate Libby's measurements with more modern equipment and much greater accuracy. They concluded that the out-of-balance condition is real and even worse than Libby believed (I believe his rates were 18 for formation and 15 for decay). Radiocarbon is actually forming 28% - 37% faster than it is decaying.
One of the things that's happened recently on this front is the attempt at upper-end measurement of the C-14 dating method. Diamonds were taken from rocks aged at around 100 million years old. Carbon-dating the diamonds showed an age of 65000 years. How could that be? I'm not an expert in anthropology...have any of the skeletons/dinosaur bones/etc. ever been tested for C-14? On one hand, you could say "they're so old (in the millions of years) that there's no C-14 left". You could also say "they died in the Flood, before there was appreciable C-14". Or you might see C-14 in there (like the diamonds) which shows that they're orders of magnitude younger than originally thought.

Going back to the equilibrium thing: one of the factors that contributes heavily to the rates of formation is the effect of high-energy cosmic rays interacting with CO2 and other molecules in the atmosphere (especially in the 5-35k altitude range, for some reason). The hypothesis is that as magnetic field strength of the earth goes up, cosmic ray penetration goes down and less C-14 will be formed. Many people agree, however, that the rock record indicates that the magnetic field has varied in both strength and direction over time. This has serious implications on C14-C12 chemistry in the upper atmosphere.

Say, for instance, that right now we have a 1 trillion to 1 ratio of C-14 to C-12 in our bodies. Assuming (as they do now) that it's been constant for millenia, if we found a skeleton tomorrow that had a ratio of, say 4Trillion to 1 (or 1/8 normal), they could say that the skeleton was pretty certainly 11000+/-500 years old---blowing the whole young earth theory out of the water. However, if 5000 years ago the earth's magnetic field was different, and allowed only 1/2 of the C-14 atoms to be formed, there would be a 2T-to-1 ratio at the beginning, and you'd be off by a half-life of 5500 years. Or perhaps there was an extremely weak field that allowed more to be formed, and you started off with a 1T-to-4 ratio. You'd be off (too young) by 2 half-lives, or 11000 years. What was the magnetic field like in 4000 BC? Or, if you believe the bible, what was the effect of a shield of water vapor surrounding the earth pre-Flood? If there had been this shield of water vapor, wouldn't C-14 formation been non-existent up until after the flood, and therefore the clock would've started at around 3000BC or so? That would sure mess with rates of C-14 decay and formation, and not allow anything close to an equilibrium situation.

This is one of the reasons I'm a big fan of science. I'd love to have someone build a model that shows what the magnetic field has done over the last 10k years and hear the explanation why. It would be great if someone would say "you're right...the effects of that axiom being changed would cause a large error to be input into the equation". Instead, it's "you blindly follow Ken Ham, and therefore cannot possibly have any relevance in a big-boy science discussion".

I'm fine with the thought that I'm a flat-earth guy, and unworthy to discuss these things. The thread was "religious debate", and I think everyone got their money's worth. I probably missed something in my novel of a post. Thanks for the discussion.
 
I don't know about that. The L*kers are incompatible with the Blazers, but we can still respect them.:dunno:


i'm referring to what people think is objectively true, not subjective opinion. presumably you don't "respect" a literal reading of the bible as a method for determining the age of the earth.

adhering to the objectivity of science necessarily has to comes with the conclusion that someone who thinks their emotional response to a rainbow is evidence god exists is simply deluding themselves. to say you respect the views of someone you think is deluding themselves makes no sense.

you can't have it both ways.
 
Nope. I didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn Express this morning.

But one of the things I do know a bit about is nuclear decay, rates of decay computation in casualty situations across nucleotides, determination of radioactivity left (useful after a reactor leak or spill)....stuff that wasn't calculatable in the 50's. When I take that government-supplied knowledge, and then read books like The Genesis Flood, or read papers detailing C-14 methodology, or the history of Liddy's publishing process, it doesn't make sense to me and I avoid buying into it as a matter of faith (completely unlike my faith in God). You can call that hypocritical, and may have a point. My core belief (my bias, if you will) is that the Bible is inerrant, that God is the Creator, and that Jesus lived a perfect life and died so that my sin wouldn't condemn me. And I totally understand if someone thinks I'm off my rocker for thinking that. Unlike the medieval Catholic church, when something comes along that challenges those beliefs, I necessarily have to take a hard look at it before adopting a new worldview. I don't willy-nilly dismiss something, unlike some of you have. In my professional experience I cannot buy into the assumptions Liddy made (and others make today, perhaps without even realizing it). As I said in the post earlier, I'm not a Hebrew scholar and am open to being corrected about the 6013 years age of the earth. Maybe it's 7500. Maybe not.
 
Nope. But I also didn't track the magnetic field. And the records from back then say there was a halo of water encompassing the earth. What does that do to cosmic rays? :)
 
Nope. But I also didn't track the magnetic field. And the records from back then say there was a halo of water encompassing the earth. What does that do to cosmic rays? :)

are you suggesting the cosmic rays dissipated the water? Because cosmic rays are the Juggernauts of physics. They ain't stopping for some pansy-ass water halo!
 
Coping out creation talking points is fun
[video=youtube;BA7Jr__IeUw]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BA7Jr__IeUw[/video]

It's not as if geologists haven't asked themselves the appropriate questions with respect to such matters, and have devised means of detecting relevant changes in a sample and compensating for them.

It's 1986, and there's a puzzle on Dave Alburger's desk. Not Ernö Rubik's latest toy, but the data from a four-year experiment to measure the half-life of the rare radioactive isotope silicon-32. On one level, the numbers fit together just fine, adding up to a half-life of 172 years, in keeping with previous estimates.

There's a devil in the detail, however. The sample's radioactivity has not been dropping steadily over time, as the textbooks demand. It has fallen, to be sure, but superimposed on that decline is an odd, periodic wobble that seems to follow the seasons. Each year, the decay rate is at its greatest around February and reaches a minimum in August.

If we know anything about radioactivity, it's that this kind of thing just doesn't happen. Radioactivity decreases predictably over time. That's why we can tell the age of rocks, fossils and prehistoric artifacts by the activity of radioactive atoms within them, and why nuclear waste becomes less toxic over time.

The fault was surely in some detail of the experimental set-up. Yet try as they might, Alburger and his colleagues at the Brookhaven National Laboratory on Long Island, New York - all nuclear physicists highly versed in this kind of painstaking measurement - couldn't find it. Eventually they published the result anyway, noting that although the variations were a puzzle, they had no bearing on their value for silicon-32's half-life (Earth and Planetary Science Letters, vol 78, p 168).
Small seasonal oscillations observed are correlated with seasonal variations in neutrino flux from the Sun. This would make sense for beta-decaying isotopes, because beta decay is mediated by the weak nuclear force, and neutrinos are weak-force interacting particles.

However, I don't think this would affect alpha-decaying isotopes, as alpha decay is mediated by the strong nuclear force, and neutrinos don't interact by a strong nuclear force. You could figure out the answer yourself. Just make a list of all the radiometric-dating elements and then look up which ones are alpha and which ones are beta. K-Ar dating relies upon an isotope that engages in electron capture or positron emission decay, which can be thought of as beta decay in reverse (though the exact physical interactions are more detailed than this). To deal with some of the problems inherent in K-Ar dating modern labs have moved on to Ar-Ar dating, which involves direct manipulation of the nuclides in question in a nuclear reactor, which produces known quantities of nuclides.

Rb-Sr dating technique uses the Rb87 isotope, which is a beta-decaying isotope, but its half life is so long (4.88 × 1010 Yr) that the neutrino flux that would be required to shorten its half-life measurably would be enormous. Assuming for one moment that a reasonable relationship exists between neutrino flux and effect upon half-life, the neutrino flux that would be required to compress a 48.8 billion year half live into the 6,000 years needed by creationists would be equivalent to the output of trillions of simultaneously detonating supernovae in close proximity - in fact, it would probably need more neutrinos passing through the planet in one go than exist in the entire universe.
 
Nope. I didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn Express this morning.

But one of the things I do know a bit about is nuclear decay, rates of decay computation in casualty situations across nucleotides, determination of radioactivity left (useful after a reactor leak or spill)....stuff that wasn't calculatable in the 50's. When I take that government-supplied knowledge, and then read books like The Genesis Flood, or read papers detailing C-14 methodology, or the history of Liddy's publishing process, it doesn't make sense to me and I avoid buying into it as a matter of faith (completely unlike my faith in God). You can call that hypocritical, and may have a point. My core belief (my bias, if you will) is that the Bible is inerrant, that God is the Creator, and that Jesus lived a perfect life and died so that my sin wouldn't condemn me. And I totally understand if someone thinks I'm off my rocker for thinking that. Unlike the medieval Catholic church, when something comes along that challenges those beliefs, I necessarily have to take a hard look at it before adopting a new worldview. I don't willy-nilly dismiss something, unlike some of you have. In my professional experience I cannot buy into the assumptions Liddy made (and others make today, perhaps without even realizing it). As I said in the post earlier, I'm not a Hebrew scholar and am open to being corrected about the 6013 years age of the earth. Maybe it's 7500. Maybe not.



http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-age-of-earth.html
 
Coping out creation talking points is fun
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BA7Jr__IeUw
So let me get this straight...now you're accusing me of not reading the books/papers I'm quoting, or not having the understanding of the science myself to discuss this? I'm "copying out creation talking points" I took from a youtube video? WTF is that?

crowtrobot's website quotes 3 separate books from Dalrymple. I'll have to check that out. It's odd, though...I ask about uncertainty in the assumptions Liddy made and you give me meteorites. Can't you just say: you're right, that's something that is might not potentially be a good assumption, instead of changing the subject? Don't get me wrong, the meteorite data was fun to read and I'll read more of dalrymple so that I'm not cherry-picking, but neither of you in your posts answered the question I asked. I'm kind of getting used to it, though.
It's not as if geologists haven't asked themselves the appropriate questions with respect to such matters, and have devised means of detecting relevant changes in a sample and compensating for them.


Small seasonal oscillations observed are correlated with seasonal variations in neutrino flux from the Sun. This would make sense for beta-decaying isotopes, because beta decay is mediated by the weak nuclear force, and neutrinos are weak-force interacting particles.

However, I don't think this would affect alpha-decaying isotopes, as alpha decay is mediated by the strong nuclear force, and neutrinos don't interact by a strong nuclear force. You could figure out the answer yourself. Just make a list of all the radiometric-dating elements and then look up which ones are alpha and which ones are beta. K-Ar dating relies upon an isotope that engages in electron capture or positron emission decay, which can be thought of as beta decay in reverse (though the exact physical interactions are more detailed than this). To deal with some of the problems inherent in K-Ar dating modern labs have moved on to Ar-Ar dating, which involves direct manipulation of the nuclides in question in a nuclear reactor, which produces known quantities of nuclides.

Rb-Sr dating technique uses the Rb87 isotope, which is a beta-decaying isotope, but its half life is so long (4.88 × 1010 Yr) that the neutrino flux that would be required to shorten its half-life measurably would be enormous. Assuming for one moment that a reasonable relationship exists between neutrino flux and effect upon half-life, the neutrino flux that would be required to compress a 48.8 billion year half live into the 6,000 years needed by creationists would be equivalent to the output of trillions of simultaneously detonating supernovae in close proximity - in fact, it would probably need more neutrinos passing through the planet in one go than exist in the entire universe.
Which part of my post of
Decay constants are measurable and, well, constant (after some small fudge factor either way, but that's not really an issue)
prompted to you write 4 paragraphs agreeing with me, and to ignore the question about rates of formation and decay being constant and at equilibrium (assumption #2). Supposedly you've got every scientist in the world on your side, but the question isn't being answered!
 
So let me get this straight...now you're accusing me of not reading the books/papers I'm quoting, or not having the understanding of the science myself to discuss this? I'm "copying out creation talking points" I took from a youtube video? WTF is that?

I'm saying I have heard these arguments before and to be mindful of your sources. Ken Ham isn't an idiot because he is a theist. He's an idiot because he has no understanding of science and tries to cope his beliefs to anything. He comes into investigation with a bias.

Plus assuming you believe in the literal creation story, then you should know it says that the earth is flat and how rain supposedly works (flat out wrong on both accounts).
crowtrobot's website quotes 3 separate books from Dalrymple. I'll have to check that out. It's odd, though...I ask about uncertainty in the assumptions Liddy made and you give me meteorites. Can't you just say: you're right, that's something that is might not potentially be a good assumption, instead of changing the subject? Don't get me wrong, the meteorite data was fun to read and I'll read more of dalrymple so that I'm not cherry-picking, but neither of you in your posts answered the question I asked. I'm kind of getting used to it, though.

Which part of my post of prompted to you write 4 paragraphs agreeing with me, and to ignore the question about rates of formation and decay being constant and at equilibrium (assumption #2). Supposedly you've got every scientist in the world on your side, but the question isn't being answered!
I wanted to expand on your analysis and similar ones because science is not limited to one field of study (i did get carried away, but i was having too much fun typing about it :ghoti: ).

As I said in the post earlier, I'm not a Hebrew scholar and am open to being corrected about the 6013 years age of the earth. Maybe it's 7500. Maybe not.
But every time someone attempts to give you an answer, you try to cope it with your worldview. In other words, you are investigating a crime scene with the assumption that the accused is guilty. Creation "Scientists" search and choose which evidence supports their hypothesis, ignoring other finds in the universe and on our planet.

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-age-of-earth.html
 
So does religion.


How about the scientific principle known as the observer effect? Could it possibly be that light goes 186,000 miles/sec only when we measure it, but goes faster or slower the rest of the time? Or C14 decays at a rate we measure today but at a different rate 1M years ago? We simply take a lot for granted.

So I come back to my original point. I am not a man of faith, nor do I have much respect for televangelists or most religious leaders (MLK Jr. being the kind of exception). THe earth is 4.5B years old. The universe is at least 13.5B years old - maybe older if science is wrong (and its been wrong plenty).

I'll leave this after reading Denny's post, but the equilibrium stuff I was talking about was this:

I wonder what your take on my post is...

I tried to point out that things may not be what they appear to be even though we can measure them. An example I didn't give, perhaps to make things clearer, would be if now were shortly after the big bang - the mass of everything was in a much more confined volume, gravity's effect would be much more powerful, and I don't see how we'd measure much of anything as we do now. Or if we looked for water on the earth 4.5B years ago, we'd have found none.

The ~13.5B age of the universe offers another paradox (that is addressed on wikipedia, but not to my satisfaction).

The universe is effectively a time machine of sorts. We're seeing light from the sun that took 8 minutes to reach our eye, so we're effectively seeing the sun as it was 8 minutes ago - if it exploded, we wouldn't know it for 8 minutes. As we look deeper into space, we're looking further back in time.

So when scientists talk about seeing the oldest things 13.5B light years away, the light from those things would have traveled for 13.5B years and originated 13.5B years ago. Yet 13.5B years ago, the origin of that light would have been virtually right next to us. So how does it take light 13.5B years to reach us?

It would make sense if we moved away from the source for this whole time at 99% the speed of light, even taking into account the expansion of the fabric of space time But we're not:

The Earth travels around the Sun at 18.55 miles per second.

The Sun travels around the center of the Milky Way galaxy at 487,383 mph or 135 miles per second. It takes 225 million years to make one circumference of the galaxy. The Sun is 4.6 billion years old, so it has made the trip 20.5 times.

This WWW page says 1.9M miles/hour.

http://www.jyi.org/features/ft.php?id=1346



In other words, we're not even travelling at 1/670th the speed of light let alone 99%.
 
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II tried to point out that things may not be what they appear to be even though we can measure them. An example I didn't give, perhaps to make things clearer, would be if now were shortly after the big bang - the mass of everything was in a much more confined volume, gravity's effect would be much more powerful, and I don't see how we'd measure much of anything as we do now.

everything we know about "shortly" after the big bang is inferred from evidence, not measured.


The ~13.5B age of the universe offers another paradox (that is addressed on wikipedia, but not to my satisfaction).

The universe is effectively a time machine of sorts. We're seeing light from the sun that took 8 minutes to reach our eye, so we're effectively seeing the sun as it was 8 minutes ago - if it exploded, we wouldn't know it for 8 minutes. As we look deeper into space, we're looking further back in time.

So when scientists talk about seeing the oldest things 13.5B light years away, the light from those things would have traveled for 13.5B years and originated 13.5B years ago. Yet 13.5B years ago, the origin of that light would have been virtually right next to us. So how does it take light 13.5B years to reach us?

It would make sense if we moved away from the source for this whole time at 99% the speed of light, even taking into account the expansion of the fabric of space time But we're not:

The Earth travels around the Sun at 18.55 miles per second.

The Sun travels around the center of the Milky Way galaxy at 487,383 mph or 135 miles per second. It takes 225 million years to make one circumference of the galaxy. The Sun is 4.6 billion years old, so it has made the trip 20.5 times.

This WWW page says 1.9M miles/hour.

http://www.jyi.org/features/ft.php?id=1346

In other words, we're not even travelling at 1/670th the speed of light let alone 99%.

the speed of revolution of the earth around the sun, sun around the galaxy etc. have nothing to do with the speed of the expansion of the universe. the furthest galaxies we can see are indeed being carried away from us at close to the speed of light by expansion. in fact cosmologists believe there is a lot we can't see beyond them moving away from us at FASTER than the speed of light (the relative speed of exansion between two objects is not constrained by the speed of light).
 
everything we know about "shortly" after the big bang is inferred from evidence, not measured.




the speed of revolution of the earth around the sun, sun around the galaxy etc. have nothing to do with the speed of the expansion of the universe. the furthest galaxies we can see are indeed being carried away from us at close to the speed of light by expansion. in fact cosmologists believe there is a lot we can't see beyond them moving away from us at FASTER than the speed of light (the relative speed of exansion between two objects is not constrained by the speed of light).

I know the universe is larger than the radius of 13.5B years by about 2x. Not enough to justify what you wrote about expansion being enough to carry things away from us at the speed of light. The 2x would make it 2/670ths, if you get my point.

I also know that there is a "visible" universe which is determined by how far light can travel in 13.5B years.

Assuming the big bang was a spherical explosion, the radius of that sphere would be 13.5B light years, or 27B diameter. We obviously cannot see 27B light years distance because light has had only 13.5B years to travel.

That's not accounting for the ~60B diameter of the actual universe factoring in the expansion of space time.

And as far as I've learned, the speed of light is not additive like other speeds are. If you are riding toward me on a beam of light and I am riding toward you on another, we do not appear to be coming towards each other at 2x the speed of light (but 1x!).
 
Cosmology's a bit out of my realm. My initial thought is that: if God did "speak the heavens and earth into existence" (and I get that that's fantasy to many), then I don't see a disconnect with His speaking into existence, say, a star that's 10B light-years away and moving farther. Or that He spoke into existence the residue of an exploded supernova

I love planetary astronomy. I just diverged from that path at about the time it went into hard-core physics, since I was studying into the Aerospace Engineering track, not the Astro. I'll push the "I believe" button on your numbers, b/c I have no idea how something measures 13.5B light-years away (and moving away from us). I'll take that as a look-up...is there a better site than wiki to explain it?
 
Cosmology's a bit out of my realm. My initial thought is that: if God did "speak the heavens and earth into existence" (and I get that that's fantasy to many), then I don't see a disconnect with His speaking into existence, say, a star that's 10B light-years away and moving farther. Or that He spoke into existence the residue of an exploded supernova

Agreed, there's no disconnect. Nor is there a disconnect with God telling some dude to kill some other dude. Or with the idea that you will explode with the force of 1000 tons of TNT if you read the last sentence in this post. Or with, indeed, absolutely anything at all. Invisible little green people with penises on their heads walking among us and stealing our fingernail cuttings? God works in mysterious ways.

barfo
 
I need one of those fingernail dudes.
 
I know the universe is larger than the radius of 13.5B years by about 2x. Not enough to justify what you wrote about expansion being enough to carry things away from us at the speed of light. The 2x would make it 2/670ths, if you get my point.

the 1/670th speed of light thing you mention is nothing but a measure of the earth's local movment through space relative to our immediate surroundings. it is NOT a measure of the speed we are being carried away from more distant objects by the exansion of space itself. the earth's local movement through space and the expansion of space itself are two entirely different things.
 
Cosmology's a bit out of my realm. My initial thought is that: if God did "speak the heavens and earth into existence" (and I get that that's fantasy to many), then I don't see a disconnect with His speaking into existence, say, a star that's 10B light-years away and moving farther.


except god would also have had to create the light from the star already in transit to make it look exactly like it had been travelling for 10 billion years.

your god is apparently a devious trickster who likes to plant false evidence to fool humans.
 
the 1/670th speed of light thing you mention is nothing but a measure of the earth's local movment through space relative to our immediate surroundings. it is NOT a measure of the speed we are being carried away from more distant objects by the exansion of space itself. the earth's local movement through space and the expansion of space itself are two entirely different things.

The 1/670th is a measure of how fast you or I are moving when sitting still. It factors in the movement of the earth, the sun, and the milky way.

The entire universe has expanded 2x larger than the radius that light would travel from the big bang to the "edge" of the universe. You can 2x our speed and it still doesn't make any sense that anything but light is travelling near light speed towards or away from us.
 
Cosmology's a bit out of my realm. My initial thought is that: if God did "speak the heavens and earth into existence" (and I get that that's fantasy to many), then I don't see a disconnect with His speaking into existence, say, a star that's 10B light-years away and moving farther. Or that He spoke into existence the residue of an exploded supernova

I love planetary astronomy. I just diverged from that path at about the time it went into hard-core physics, since I was studying into the Aerospace Engineering track, not the Astro. I'll push the "I believe" button on your numbers, b/c I have no idea how something measures 13.5B light-years away (and moving away from us). I'll take that as a look-up...is there a better site than wiki to explain it?

In case I wasn't clear...

The big bang happened like 13.7B years ago. 13.5B years ago, the universe was a really dense place compared to now. The origin of the light that's now hitting our eyes had to be of a source really close to us (back then). If we're moving at 2M miles/hour away from the source and the source is moving 2M miles/hour away from us, it sure seems like light travelling at 670M miles/hour would have passed us by billions of years ago.

If we were moving away from the source at the speed of light, the light would never reach our eyes.

And when I say "back then" and "us", Earth wasn't formed until 4.5B years ago, so I'm basically talking about the space we occupy.

If everything were stationary/static, and some star was 13.5B light years away, it would take 13.5B years for the light to reach our eyes (telescopes, whatever).

As an aside, I once interviewed a fellow who was Chief Scientist for AT&T's Bell Labs for a job as a board member of a company I ran. His name is Arno Penzias.
 
The 1/670th is a measure of how fast you or I are moving when sitting still. It factors in the movement of the earth, the sun, and the milky way.

it makes no sense to measure the speed of an object unless it is in relation to the frame of reference created by another object. there is no fixed background frame of reference that would allow you to say we are moving at 1/670 without referencing another object. you can only measure speed when comparing 2 specific objects (basic general relativity).

using LOCAL nearby galaxies as a frame of reference, you might say that due to the revolution of the earth, rotation of the milky way etc we are moving at 1/670 speed of light relative to those galaxies.

this however says nothing about the movement between objects due to the expansion of space, which is a different kind of motion you aren't accounting for - one that increases with distance. for the galaxies closest to us the rate of expansion is negligible and local movement can overwhelm it (andromeda is actually moving towards us). the further out you look, though, the greater and more prominent the rate of exansion becomes, quickly dwarfing local movment through space, to the point that the most distant galaxies we can see are indeed moving away from us at near the speed of light.

think of this like objects moving around on the surface of a baloon WHILE the baloon is being inflated. an object's movment accross the surface of the baloon is local movement through space, while the expansion of the surface of the baloon itself due to it being inflated is like the expansion of space. the further away from us an object is on the exanding surface of the baloon the faster it will be moving away from us.

this admittedly isn't gonna make sense if you don't have a basic understanding of GR. if you want to understand anything about cosmology gotta start there.
 
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it makes no sense to measure the speed of an object unless it is in relation to the frame of reference created by another object. there is no fixed background frame of reference that would allow you to say we are moving at 1/670 without referencing another object. you can only measure speed when comparing 2 specific objects (basic general relativity).

using LOCAL nearby galaxies as a frame of reference, you might say that due to the revolution of the earth, rotation of the milky way etc we are moving at 1/670 speed of light relative to those galaxies.

this however says nothing about the movement between objects due to the expansion of space, which is a different kind of motion you aren't accounting for - one that increases with distance. for the galaxies closest to us the rate of expansion is negligible and local movement can overwhelm it (andromeda is actually moving towards us). the further out you look, though, the greater and more prominent the rate of exansion becomes, quickly dwarfing local movment through space, to the point that the most distant galaxies we can see are indeed moving away from us at near the speed of light.

think of this like objects moving around on the surface of a baloon WHILE the baloon is being inflated. an object's movment accross the surface of the baloon is local movement through space, while the expansion of the surface of the baloon itself due to it being inflated is like the expansion of space. the further away from us an object is on the exanding surface of the baloon the faster it will be moving away from us.

this admittedly isn't gonna make sense if you don't have a basic understanding of GR. if you want to understand anything about cosmology gotta start there.

I get General Relativity, and I've already pointed out that the universe is 2x larger than the possible radius of the big bang explosion (assuming everything flew out from the center at C) due to this effect.

My understanding is that we're moving in relation to the origin of the big bang at 1.9M miles/hour. And at an accelerating rate.

It's also my understanding that when they are looking as far back in time as possible, they are looking toward where the cingularity was.
 
The answers are:

1) The speed of light is not a constant.
2) The forumula d = r x t is meaningless, since 'r' is indeterminate due to expansion of space.
3) Everything in the universe is not moving away from everything else (you mentioned Andromeda, though the Milky Way is currently in collision with 2 other galaxies)
4) Supposedly, you can in a finite time catch up with something "moving away from us at the speed of light or greater" travelling at only a slow velocity.
 
I've already pointed out that the universe is 2x larger than the possible radius of the big bang explosion (assuming everything flew out from the center at C) due to this effect.

the expansion rate of the universe itself is (theoretically) not limited by the speed of light at all. in fact most current models of the big bang include an inflationary period where space expanded exponentially faster than the speed of light, leaving the universe exponentially larger than 14 billion light years wide. some cosmololgists think the space of our universe could even be infinite.

My understanding is that we're moving in relation to the origin of the big bang at 1.9M miles/hour. And at an accelerating rate

the big bang happened everywhere in space and there is no "origin" point to measure our speed of expansion relative to.

we can measure our movement THROUGH space relative to the cosmic microwave background radiation - which is everywhere, which might be what you read about (not sure), but again our movement through space is a different thing than measuring how fast 2 objects are being carried away from each other by the expansion of space itself.

It's also my understanding that when they are looking as far back in time as possible, they are looking toward where the cingularity was.

again, if there was truly a singularity (there isn't a consensus on that) it would have been everywhere in space. hard to conceptualize.

yes what we see when we look further out is how the universe looked when it was younger. unfortunately the earliest universe would have been completely opaque so there is a limit on how far back we will be able to see.
 
One more thing.

I take it that the Universe was a singularity because it's what the evidence presented to me says it was.

In particular, I've seen a 3D image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope where the guy who runs the program was given 10% of the telescope time for whatever he chose. He chose to point the thing, I presume, toward the center of the universe and took this photo of the oldest things in the visible universe.

If they didn't point the telescope toward the center of the universe, where the singularity was, then I don't understand how they could have taken such a picture.
 
One more thing.

I take it that the Universe was a singularity because it's what the evidence presented to me says it was.

In particular, I've seen a 3D image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope where the guy who runs the program was given 10% of the telescope time for whatever he chose. He chose to point the thing, I presume, toward the center of the universe and took this photo of the oldest things in the visible universe.

If they didn't point the telescope toward the center of the universe, where the singularity was, then I don't understand how they could have taken such a picture.


again, there is no center of the universe - no point in space you can look towards that everthing is expanding from. the big bang (and the singularity if there was one) would have encompassed all of space obviously, and from any point in space right now would have appeared to happen everywhere in space equally. the singularity would now be everywhere equally.

the big bang/singularity is like the inflating balloon surface. the surface starts very small, and as it expands all points on the surface of the balloon move away from each other, yet there is no point on the surface you can look to that everything is expanding from. the perspective looking along the surface is the same at any point on the surface. this is a 2D conceptualization of what is going on in our expanding 3D (4D) spacetime.

the oldest light we can see is reaching us from all directions, and the oldest objects we can find could potentially be in any direction.

and also again, we will never be able to "see" all the way back to the beginning using any technology, because the earliest universe was completely opaque to radiation. if there was a singularity we will only ever be able to infer it from indirect evidence.
 

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