Planck satellite details universe's 'oldest light in the sky'.
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In France, they pronounce this as 'le big bong'. Sounds more like an accoutrement of marijuana culture to me. The French are obsessed with sticking English words into French sentences, and then Frenchifying the pronunciation. Thus, 'cool' becomes a protracted 'cu (French 'u') + L', and as for Hulk, a long French 'u' plus 'lk'.It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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scottycelt
Really convincing stuff ...
http://news.sky.com/story/1067930/oldest-light-in-universe-picture-released
and that's just the advert ...
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostReally convincing stuff ...
http://news.sky.com/story/1067930/oldest-light-in-universe-picture-released
and that's just the advert ...
"By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent
A new picture of space indicates that the universe is even older than first thought - around 60 million years to be precise"
...ah, the Sky Science Correspondent has a fine sense of 'precision' here...
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Pikaia
I think the universe is infinitely old - it will never end so why should it have a beginning? And why should anyone equate the Big Bang with the beginning of the universe?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post"By Tom Parmenter, Sky News Correspondent
A new picture of space indicates that the universe is even older than first thought - around 60 million years to be precise"
...ah, the Sky Science Correspondent has a fine sense of 'precision' here...It loved to happen. -- Marcus Aurelius
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Originally posted by Thropplenoggin View PostIn France, they pronounce this as 'le big bong'. Sounds more like an accoutrement of marijuana culture to me. The French are obsessed with sticking English words into French sentences, and then Frenchifying the pronunciation. Thus, 'cool' becomes a protracted 'cu (French 'u') + L', and as for Hulk, a long French 'u' plus 'lk'.
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Originally posted by Pikaia View PostI think the universe is infinitely old - it will never end so why should it have a beginning? And why should anyone equate the Big Bang with the beginning of the universe?Originally posted by vinteuil View Post...A new picture of space indicates that the universe is even older than first thought - around 60 million years to be precise"
...ah, the Sky Science Correspondent has a fine sense of 'precision' here...
There are, of course, other possibilities, but a 'steady state' universe like you propound is at odds with the massive amount of evidence of the Big Bang, and no one seems to take it seriously any more.
But the universe seems to be 60 million years older than we had previously thought it. So that would be about 13.76 billion years rather than 13.7 billion years. Wow!Last edited by Pabmusic; 21-03-13, 22:52.
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Pikaia
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThere's plenty of evidence that the universe is finite - it had a beginning and will have an end (the fact that it's expanding, for one thing, implies that it's expanding from a point).
Also, cosmologists believe that the universe is infinite in size, and always has been. There is nothing to prevent an infinite universe from expanding, ie objects in it get further apart.
There are, of course, other possibilities, but a 'steady state' universe like you propound ....
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Originally posted by Pikaia View PostIn fact the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate (surprisingly) and so it looks like it will continue to expand for ever...
Who am I to say, though?
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