Jump to content

Bmpbmp1975

Senior Members
  • Posts

    307
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Bmpbmp1975

  1. I get it now, I did need a calculator, and I am not trolling I have been trying really hard to learn as of late. I just dont understand why this find is a big deal if it’s not a worry, it’s spreading to a lot of different articles on sites ill just stop asking questions
  2. See I was always thought the faster it expands the faster the universe ends. That’s what I meant before by if a section of faster by 10% the universe ends faster would that be in our lifetimes to clarify my comment before
  3. 10% would be like 1.5 billion right so universe would be like 12.7 or 14.7 b years old
  4. What I mean by values is how much faster vs how much slower. Are they tiny difference in speed or major ones?
  5. Without understanding everything sounds scary, it’s hard to understand it is expanding faster by a little is it like double the actual speed. thats why I am curious about the values
  6. It would change the age of the universe, change our understanding, change the lifetime of the universe, it would affect a lot of things
  7. To me it sounds it’s bigger information that we think with possible bad outcomes for us
  8. That’s depends on the values and if we’re still here.
  9. That’s why I was hoping someone here can make sense of the values
  10. I am just very confused on this paper, I am sorry. I have having trouble understanding the values and can’t tell if tiny or large.values.
  11. Exactly my point, are standard tests don’t show it different ways but this better test shows the speed difference of expansion is 30% which is a major difference which will definitely effect our current understanding of the age and end of the universe drastically
  12. According to this article the significance of difference is 30% "Together with colleagues from the University of Bonn and Harvard University, we looked at the behaviour of over 800 galaxy clusters in the present Universe," says Konstantinos. "If the isotropy hypothesis was correct, the properties of the clusters would be uniform across the sky. But we actually saw significant differences." properties, with similar temperatures, appeared to be less bright than what we would expect in one direction of the sky, and brighter than expected in another direction," says Thomas. "The difference was quite significant, around 30 percent. These differences are not random but have a clear pattern depending on the direction in which we observed in the sky https://www.google.ca/amp/s/phys.org/news/2020-04-basic-assumption-universe.amp
  13. Oh so your saying our currently calculated information was from all sides and not just one side. Can it be that current sides recently changed there speeds
  14. The thing is we doN t know at what rates, one side can be normal and the other end can be expanding at a extreme, so may not be Tiny difference at all
  15. I had meant from this paragraph about fate “One of the pillars of cosmology – the study of the history and fate of the entire universe – is that the universe is ‘isotropic,’ meaning the same in all directions,” said Konstantinos Migkas of the University of Bonn in Germany, who led the new study. “Our work shows there may be cracks in that pillar.”
  16. What do you mean conclusive enough to worry about, can this widely affect our understanding of age and fate of the universe? also this a is anew testing process is it not using existing telescopes
  17. I mean depending on the values we use the rate of expansion to calculate the age of the universe how much does this change it. also they predict the possible fate of the universe in about 5 billion years so how much shorter is that time frame with the new values is more my questions cause isn’t this the first time testing this with a new testing process
  18. So I didn’t realize the measurements were so tiny I did not understand the values in the paper.
  19. I guess is this something that will not affect us in our lifetimes?
  20. We seem to have Gotten off topic I apologize. how much do these numbers and values change our current understanding in the age of the universe , the size of the universe and the lifetime of the universe before its demise? the article mentions it a little “One of the pillars of cosmology – the study of the history and fate of the entire universe – is that the universe is ‘isotropic,’ meaning the same in all directions,” said Konstantinos Migkas of the University of Bonn in Germany, who led the new study. “Our work shows there may be cracks in that pillar.”
  21. Learned and experience what? I am starting to think you are playing games or just implying I am dumb, if that is that case I would rather save this post for people who want to provide answers and not just whoosh. or your stating that this find has bad consequences?
  22. Would be easier for me to understand if you stopped talking in riddle and explained what you mean?
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.