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-   -   Important Math Question (http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/showthread.php?t=10679)

Grandpa Kim November 2nd, 2003 12:34 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
Okay, I give up. If you insist on putting limits to infinity I am unable to present a coherent argument. All I will say is you haven't thought it through.

ie: Where does that degraded photon energy go?
How do you know infinite space is possible without infinite time?

This is a great thought exercise for expanding your personal universe. Think about the ramifications of infinity long enough and it begins to collapse like a house of cards. Anything and everything is possible-- no, not possible but has occurred an infinite number of times.
So maybe the universe is infinite.

But I don't believe it. The universe is finite.

Phoenix-D November 2nd, 2003 01:06 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Grandpa Kim:
Okay, I give up. If you insist on putting limits to infinity I am unable to present a coherent argument. All I will say is you haven't thought it through.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">As it happens, I'm not putting limits on. You're just disregarding the space argument..

Quote:

ie: Where does that degraded photon energy go?
How do you know infinite space is possible without infinite time?
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">The photon energy is lost, or absorbed. Some fraction is sent on, which then hits something else and repeats the process. Infinite number of photons..infinite number of barriers. And at any given time, only a finite number of those photons are actually arriving at any given point.

Quote:

This is a great thought exercise for expanding your personal universe. Think about the ramifications of infinity long enough and it begins to collapse like a house of cards. Anything and everything is possible-- no, not possible but has occurred an infinite number of times.
So maybe the universe is infinite.

But I don't believe it. The universe is finite.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Try this thought exericise then. If the universe is finite- what happens when you reach the edge? I'd have an easier time beliving that -space- is infinite, even if matter isn't.

EDIT: word-level typos.

[ November 01, 2003, 23:07: Message edited by: Phoenix-D ]

narf poit chez BOOM November 2nd, 2003 01:12 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
i didn't say anything about infinite time, however, i do beleive time is infinite to. and i fail to see any ramifications of infinite time on my statement, nor do i see how my statement limits infinity.

Phoenix-D, would enough photons bump into each other for that to be how photons might degrade?

Suicide Junkie November 2nd, 2003 01:13 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
Quote:

Try this thought exericise then. If the universe is finite- what happens when you reach the edge? I'd have an easier time beliving that -space- is infinite, even if matter isn't.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">The same way that the Earth is finite in size, but there is no edge to fall off of.

narf poit chez BOOM November 2nd, 2003 01:29 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
yes, but there's an edge to launch a rocket off of.

Jack Simth November 2nd, 2003 01:29 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Phoenix-D:
Photons aren't infinite, and with every step you loose energy.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Actually, energy never really goes away - it changes form (occasionally to matter), it goes to a different density over a different volume, but so far, every time someone somewhere has found a contradiction to that, it is later found that what was happening was a conVersion to a previously unrecognized form of energy.

deccan November 2nd, 2003 03:44 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
This sounds like a good time to bring up the:

Cosmology FAQ

One argument against an infinite universe is that the universe seems to be cooling, i.e. the cosmic background radiation is growing weaker over time. If the universe is truly infinite, with an infinite number of stars, it seems that the universe will only get hotter over time.

deccan November 2nd, 2003 03:48 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
Quote:

Originally posted by Phoenix-D:
The photon energy is lost, or absorbed. Some fraction is sent on, which then hits something else and repeats the process. Infinite number of photons..infinite number of barriers. And at any given time, only a finite number of those photons are actually arriving at any given point.
<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">As Jack pointed out, the energy cannot be destroyed. Given enough time, anything that blocks and absorbs those photons will eventually re-radiate it out again.

DavidG November 2nd, 2003 04:26 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
Quote:

Originally posted by narf poit chez BOOM:
if the universe is infinite in size, the distance between us and any galaxy will still not be infinite.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">If the distance between us and any galaxy is not infinite then clearly the universe is not infinite in size.

Phoenix-D November 2nd, 2003 04:43 AM

Re: Important Math Question
 
Quote:

Originally posted by DavidG:
</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Originally posted by narf poit chez BOOM:
if the universe is infinite in size, the distance between us and any galaxy will still not be infinite.

<font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">If the distance between us and any galaxy is not infinite then clearly the universe is not infinite in size. </font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="sans-serif, arial, verdana">Err, not exactly. A universe being infinite in size doesn't preclude two things from being next to each other. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif

re: photon energy: true. The background actualy -cooling- probably precludes an infinite universe; it'd have to be either constant or increasing (unless all the non-visible stars are pulsing at the same time, but that is er, not likely).


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