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Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
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It's also based on cosmological assumptions based on far too little evidence, which is the mistake modern science generally makes even when it gets its math right. Not to mention the misinterpretations of people reflecting upon the hypotheses and conjecture of cosmologists. Or the imaginitive leaps of science fiction and TV documentaries. PvK |
Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
hmm, I thought a billion years was about right before we could actually traverse universal barriers. Well maybe not exactly but the intent was that it would be a very long time.
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Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
Entropy, cold death... if the universe keeps expanding everything will break down eventually.
http://www.physlink.com/Education/AskExperts/ae181.cfm |
Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
Assuming that there were no unknown factors( which there most certainly is ), wouldn't gravity keep the universe from maximum entropy? Is there anything to indicate the universe wont just do the whole big-bang thing over and over again?
I also thought I read somewhere that they'd discovered that light didn't actually travel infinitely, but somehow bended back towards us when it had travelled for some time? |
Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
That's one possibility, but as of the moment the Universe's expansion actually seems to be speeding up, not slowing down..
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Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
Last i heard it was speeding up too. Really, the 'Last Answer' story answers this well http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/smilies/wink.gif
So if everything we know now is true 9which is probably isn't), the universe will run out of 'energy' some day. |
Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
Yeah, but when that 'energy' is depleted and everything has 'stopped', gravity will still be there( as far as we know ). What is to stop it from pulling everything together again?
I read the Last Answer. It was a nice read, thanks. |
Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
Gravity would dissipate to pretty much nothing I suspect. Gravity is a force and spread over theoretical particles called gravitons. So as stars, planets, elements, atoms and particles break down, so does the gravitational force. All these things are held together by very strong forces compared to gravity, so if those are breaking, gravity probably isn't a big issue.
Of course, this is just based on my basic understanding and I could be wrong. |
Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
According to that theory, the universe seems to exceed the "escape velocity from the Big Bang".
However, this is all rather presumptuous speculative interpretation about the meaning of what we're seeing from our perspective. A mere few hundred years ago, the general idea was you fell off the edge of the earth once you sailed past the Azores from Europe... I'm not convinced that modern cosmologists have got it nearly as right as some people might assume. PvK |
Re: OT - Physics Question on Anti-Matter
Well, I wont claim to know any better, but I would have thought that if gravity was still there, however 'weak', the particles would slowly start to pull together again; unless something was actually exerting force on them( stronger than the gravity ), keeping them apart.
Anyway, if indeed the expansion is speeding up, that means energy is being continusly applied to the mass in the universe( thus providing the speed increase). Since energy = mass ( right? ), that means further that the amount of mass in the universe is increasing as well? And since all mass has gravity, as far as we know, that also means gravity increases? Thus eventually becoming strong enough to counter whatever other force is pulling the stuff apart...? My non-existing education got cut short, so I'm a little out of the loop. Please correct me if something's wrong with my understanding. Also, wont the whole 'expansion speeding up' thing also mean the entire mass of the universe will be traveling at light-speed in a 'few years'? |
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