sol invictus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2007
- Messages
- 8,613
My presumption based upon our current evidence? The universe is infinite both large and small.
You think it's infinite and eternal?
Nice trap, arth.
My presumption based upon our current evidence? The universe is infinite both large and small.
But you said the universe is eternal. Why aren't all the stars dead?They did not know in 1823 that stars died!
It was not intended as a trap. I just wanted to get more into Jerome's head, to understand where he's coming from.
Can you elaborate on what you mean by "infinte both large and small"?My presumption based upon our current evidence? The universe is infinite both large and small.
But you said the universe is eternal. Why aren't all the stars dead?

I haven't seen that thread. Perhaps you could link to it.I think we should move this back to the atheists don't understand science thread.![]()
Yes, I was talking about a vacuum. I specified that the only force acting is gravity. Speed is proportional to distance in an explosion when there are no forces acting. The universe does not expand into an atmosphere - there is nothing outside it to push back on it.
You have failed.
They did not know in 1823 that stars died!
You are interested in primary games? Do you really want to play?

Gas Expansion-Proportional to distance only if particles in expansion are infinitely small and they are not.
]A vacuum cannot be remotely similar to the nothing outside the universe.
My presumption based upon our current evidence? The universe is infinite both large and small.
I assume that you have a list of evidence for your claim that the universe is "infinite both large and small". This evidence will have to count for the evidence that the observable universe has a finite size and age, e.g.I assume that the small bit of the claim refers to small distances. In that case you need to know about the Planck length.
- The cosmic microwave background is a relic of the Big Bang.
- The Hubble constant means that about 13.73 billion years ago all the matter in the universe was gathered at one point (Big Bang).
- The age of white dwarf stars provides a minimum age for the universe (12.1 +/- 0.9 Gyr) and the lack of evidence for older stars (e.g. black dwarf stars or cool white dwarf stars) suggests for a finite age of the universe.
- The half-life of protons is greater than 1.9*1029 years so they are considered as stable. But some Grand Unified Theories allow a finite half-life and so given an infinite amount of time they will all decay.
Can you elaborate on what you mean by "infinte both large and small"?
While such a universe might be eternal, the individual stars within it are not. All the stars in such a universe would have long since burned out and left the night sky dark unless there was a process that produced new stars. If so, it is reasonable to assume that at any given time there would exist some new stars far enough away that their light has not yet reached Earth.
Whether or not we would see more stars in such a universe, I can't say - it depends on the birth and death rates.
(No, I don't believe we live in such a universe.)
BGR is assumed a relic of the Big Bang. If an infiante numbers of stars have been born and have died an infinate number of times in an infinate number of places than we would also expect to see BGR.
You are assming that the oldest stars we see are the oldest stars that have ever existed.
As our technology has progressivly increased to see futher out into space and futher into the atom we find no boundaries.
BGR is assumed a relic of the Big Bang. If an infiante numbers of stars have been born and have died an infinate number of times in an infinate number of places than we would also expect to see BGR.
How quickly you forget. We discussed this already. Galaxies are not evenly distributed throughout space. We would not expect to see evenly distributed background radiation in your scenario.BGR is assumed a relic of the Big Bang. If an infiante numbers of stars have been born and have died an infinate number of times in an infinate number of places than we would also expect to see BGR.
The problem is that there are no older stars than the oldest stars we see. If your model were true, we would expect to see older versions of stars. We don't. Why is that?You are assming that the oldest stars we see are the oldest stars that have ever existed.