by Javachip » Thu May 03, 2007 11:29 am
This question was inspired vaguely and indirectly by today's APOD (3 May 2007). After searching the topic in this site and at Wikipedia, I am still puzzled.
I understand that the "observable universe" is a perfect sphere, with Earth (assuming that is where the observer is located) at its center and with a diameter of about 78-90 billion light years (Gly).
I also think I understand that the total Universe (observable plus unobservable) is almost completely unknown, but is probably much larger than the observable universe, or may be infinite, but could also (less likely) be smaller than the observable universe, if, for example, light passes through it more than once, creating multiple images of the same object separated by vast time intervals -- similar to a hall-of-mirrors illusion where the room looks larger than it actually is.
My question is: do we know where we are located within the total Universe? We know where our solar system is located within the Milky Way galaxy, in relation to the galactic plane and to the galactic center. Is there any absolute reference point, such as a center point, or an outer boundary, for the Universe? If not, then does the question "where are we in the Universe" have any meaning?
The age of the Universe is widely agreed to be about 13.7 Gy. The farthest known quasars are 12 Gly distant. Are the most distant quasars, say, those more than 10 Gly, evenly distributed in all directions around Earth, or are they clustered in one direction or scarce or absent in another direction?
The cosmic background radiation was found by WMAP to be homogenous at cosmological scales. Do we know in which direction from Earth the Big Bang occurred? Or does that question even have any meaning?
This question was inspired vaguely and indirectly by today's APOD (3 May 2007). After searching the topic in this site and at Wikipedia, I am still puzzled.
I understand that the "observable universe" is a perfect sphere, with Earth (assuming that is where the observer is located) at its center and with a diameter of about 78-90 billion light years (Gly).
I also think I understand that the total Universe (observable plus unobservable) is almost completely unknown, but is probably much larger than the observable universe, or may be infinite, but could also (less likely) be smaller than the observable universe, if, for example, light passes through it more than once, creating multiple images of the same object separated by vast time intervals -- similar to a hall-of-mirrors illusion where the room looks larger than it actually is.
My question is: do we know where we are located within the total Universe? We know where our solar system is located within the Milky Way galaxy, in relation to the galactic plane and to the galactic center. Is there any absolute reference point, such as a center point, or an outer boundary, for the Universe? If not, then does the question "where are we in the Universe" have any meaning?
The age of the Universe is widely agreed to be about 13.7 Gy. The farthest known quasars are 12 Gly distant. Are the most distant quasars, say, those more than 10 Gly, evenly distributed in all directions around Earth, or are they clustered in one direction or scarce or absent in another direction?
The cosmic background radiation was found by WMAP to be homogenous at cosmological scales. Do we know in which direction from Earth the Big Bang occurred? Or does that question even have any meaning?