by Chris Peterson » Fri Jan 14, 2011 12:38 am
dougettinger wrote:dougettinger wrote:Thanks for the reply. You do bring forth another question. You state that matter itself was not propelled anywhere by the Big Bang. I always thought that during the epoch when enough cooling occurred that plasma was formed and then finally atoms. Would not these atoms be mattter that is being propelled outwardly in all directions ? Maybe I really do not understand the Big Bang.
I am anxiously awaiting some hopefully easy answer to the above question which has not arrrived yet. Perhaps Chris Peterson could answer this concern. Thanks.
Let's go back to the balloon analogy. The universe is the surface of the balloon, so this is a 2D universe we are considering. You can stick little dots all over the surface to represent galaxies. As the balloon expands, these galaxies are getting farther apart. But are they moving? You could argue that they are not. If you were perched on one of those dots, you'd feel no forces in the plane of your universe. No acceleration, even if the expansion rate was not uniform. Of course, from our vantage point we understand that you'd feel a force in what we'd call the vertical or radial direction... but that direction isn't accessible to those living on the balloon, because they only perceive two dimensions. And if you look at what direction the dots are actually traveling, it isn't a direction along the surface, but is in a straight line away from the center of the balloon- a point that isn't even in that spatial universe.
Now, if you can, extend the analogy to our own Universe. We inhabit the 3D surface of a 4D universe. Distant objects aren't really moving with respect to each other (except in a minor, non-cosmological way). What's happening is that the Universe is expanding, and all these essentially stationary objects are staying in place. The only direction anything is moving is away from the 4D center of the Universe- the point where t=0. We are moving on the radial (time) axis of the Universe. We don't feel any forces on this axis. We can't see along this axis ("outward", the direction we are expanding, is the future; "inward", the direction we came from, is the past).
So, from the instant of the Big Bang to now, nothing is moving very much, nothing was propelled, nothing felt any forces from the BB.
[quote="dougettinger"][quote="dougettinger"]Thanks for the reply. You do bring forth another question. You state that matter itself was not propelled anywhere by the Big Bang. I always thought that during the epoch when enough cooling occurred that plasma was formed and then finally atoms. Would not these atoms be mattter that is being propelled outwardly in all directions ? Maybe I really do not understand the Big Bang.[/quote]
I am anxiously awaiting some hopefully easy answer to the above question which has not arrrived yet. Perhaps Chris Peterson could answer this concern. Thanks.[/quote]
Let's go back to the balloon analogy. The universe is the surface of the balloon, so this is a 2D universe we are considering. You can stick little dots all over the surface to represent galaxies. As the balloon expands, these galaxies are getting farther apart. But are they moving? You could argue that they are not. If you were perched on one of those dots, you'd feel no forces in the plane of your universe. No acceleration, even if the expansion rate was not uniform. Of course, from our vantage point we understand that you'd feel a force in what we'd call the vertical or radial direction... but that direction isn't accessible to those living on the balloon, because they only perceive two dimensions. And if you look at what direction the dots are actually traveling, it isn't a direction along the surface, but is in a straight line away from the center of the balloon- a point that isn't even in that spatial universe.
Now, if you can, extend the analogy to our own Universe. We inhabit the 3D surface of a 4D universe. Distant objects aren't really moving with respect to each other (except in a minor, non-cosmological way). What's happening is that the Universe is expanding, and all these essentially stationary objects are staying in place. The only direction anything is moving is away from the 4D center of the Universe- the point where t=0. We are moving on the radial (time) axis of the Universe. We don't feel any forces on this axis. We can't see along this axis ("outward", the direction we are expanding, is the future; "inward", the direction we came from, is the past).
So, from the instant of the Big Bang to now, nothing is moving very much, nothing was propelled, nothing felt any forces from the BB.