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Chrispen Evan

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Posts posted by Chrispen Evan

  1. The universe is expanding and by definition must have boundaries.

     

    the universe, the big one not just the observable, according to theory, doesn't have a boundary. this would imply that there is an "outside". for example, and as much as i dislike the balloon analogy, a balloons suface when being inflated gets larger but has no boundary. we must be careful to consider only the surface.

  2. shape doesn't always mean what we think it does in everyday language. for instance a donut is the same shape as a mug and also as a human. in topology all these are the same shape. meaning they can be bent and manipulated into each other. all have one hole.

     

    so topologically speaking if we drew a large triangle in space and it resembled what a triangle drawn on, say, the saddle shape then our universe would be saddle shaped. this doesn't mean the actual shape.

     

    our universe is thought to be flat and infinite according to WMAP results.

  3.  

    The Big Bang wasn't a bang though! It's an expansion of space. The nickname Big Bang was first used to ridicule the theory, but then it got stuck.

     

    this is a common misconception. Hoyle was giving a radio interview and he wanted to get across what the current theory proposed. to be dramatic he said it was like a big bang. he wasn't being derogatory at all.

     

    this is a subject that i try to correct whenever possible so no offence intended. for all his faults in not accepting the BB model until near the end Hoyle was a great scientist.

  4.  

    My reply to "black hole mass" is why is the gravity of the original star multiplied simply because of size and/or density?

     

    it isn't. if Earth was compressed down a couple of centimetres in diameter then it would form a BH. it's mass wouldn't have changed though.

     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escape_velocity

     

     

    To transform a star into a black hole, by definition, requires a large addition of the gravitational force

     

    the explosion of the star compressed the matter to get over the atomic forces keeping the particles separate.

     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernova

     

     

    Another hic-up of Black holes is the singularity, or the actual object of black holes with no mass and emence gravity. WTF is a super massive black hole's singularity?

     

    the singularity is just a name we give to a region where our current theories no longer can model successfully.

     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gravitational_singularity

     

     

     

     

  5.  

    I was wondering if there is a possibility that this black hole evaporation can cause matter-antimatter asymmetry if more quarks escape the event horizon as opposed to antiquarks.

     

    this is not how i understand the process. two virtual particles are produced. one escapes and becomes real. the other crosses the event horizon, and to keep the balance as you have a real particle escaping, takes mass from the Black Hole and so will, over time, cause the BH to evaporate. or something like that.

     

    :)

     

     

  6. you can't get a light source that will emit one exact frequency. theoretically yes but practically no. the atom that emits the light is moving so there will be doppler shift. the apparatus measuring the emitted light will move giving more doppler shift. this is due to the kinetic energy in the system causing random motion. also to measure an exact frequency you'd need and infinite number of wave cycles to measure.

  7. the cmbr is the light from the surface of last scattering, about 370 000 years after the BB. it is when the universe became transparent to light.

     

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_microwave_background_radiation

     

    The surface of last scattering refers to the set of points in space at the right distance from us so that we are now receiving photons originally emitted from those points at the time of photon decoupling.

  8. http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/51467#page/53/mode/1up

     

    Joly, J. 1899. An estimate of the geological age of the earth. Scientific Transactions of the Royal Dublin. Society, New Series, 7, 23-66.

     

    method. looked up the royal dublin society to see if copies were online. then found the edition and page numbers of the paper.

     

    Joly, J. (1899). An estimate of the geological age of the earth

     

    Scientific Transactions of the Royal Dublin. Society

     

    google search terms.

  9. which is more correct, to say massive objects can't travel at the speed of light or that massive objects can't be accelerated to the speed of light?

     

    i realise there is a problem with the latter but just would like a clarification.

     

    thanks

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