'Nature abhors a vacuum' is a well known idiom used to express the idea that empty or unfilled spaces are unnatural as they go against the laws of nature and physics. True vacuums are not known to exist anywhere in the observable universe.aristarchusinexile wrote:Why should nature abhor a vacuum?
Speed of light
Re: Nature Abhors a Vacuum but I Don't
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Re: Nature Abhors a Vacuum but I Don't
Perhaps the forum's authorities' definition of 'Science' needs to scientifically re-examined. (I do not say that with an accusatory inflection, merely with a degree of intensity.)apodman wrote:makc wrote:existing theory was that this forum can generate enough purely scientific discussion, which it failed to do.
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Re: Nature Abhors a Vacuum but I Don't
Ah - "not known to exist" is a good way of putting it. We often fail to recognize what is staring us directly in the face. This is a common human condition so striking that many of fail to find the salt shaker on the dinner table even when the shaker is touching our plate.bystander wrote:'Nature abhors a vacuum' is a well known idiom used to express the idea that empty or unfilled spaces are unnatural as they go against the laws of nature and physics. True vacuums are not known to exist anywhere in the observable universe.aristarchusinexile wrote:Why should nature abhor a vacuum?
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Re: Time
Lest there be any miscontrusion, Astro, I wast not offendedeth in the leasteth .. yeah, I wast kiddingeth aroundestlike.astrolabe wrote:Hello aristarchusinexile,
Aw gee ari, weez buds- didn't know you's just funnin'!
This forum's poster of Shakesperience seemeth to be contagiouseth .. or is it the King Jameseth contagest? Forsooth, in either uPpEr or lOwEr caseth.
Last edited by aristarchusinexile on Wed Jan 28, 2009 4:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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"Abandon the Consensus for Individual Thought"
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Re: Nature Abhors a Vacuum but I Don't
Entropy and Uncertainty are the enemies of a true vacuum. If it were just entropy, a true vacuum would be possible, but hideously unlikely. Heisenberg completely rules out such a beast, though; truly empty space would be a violation of the Uncertainty Principle, and modern quantum mechanics, while incomplete, is on pretty solid ground.
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Re: Nature Abhors a Vacuum but I Don't
I absolutely can't understand why true vacuums are thought of in such hideous ways when they're such benevolent creatures.Qev wrote:Entropy and Uncertainty are the enemies of a true vacuum. If it were just entropy, a true vacuum would be possible, but hideously unlikely. Heisenberg completely rules out such a beast, though; truly empty space would be a violation of the Uncertainty Principle, and modern quantum mechanics, while incomplete, is on pretty solid ground.
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The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
If we assume the known Universe is surrounded not by a vacuum, but by matter, does this not explain the acceleration of the expansion of the universe without needing to resort to the positing of a mysterious dark energy? In fact, the force that would seem to be in opposition to gravity would simply be gravity itself. Imagine the known Universe as contained within a bubble as one in swiss cheese, being pulled by gravity to its sides.
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
Unfortunately, this notion would place the Earth in the 3D center of the Universe, a proposition that is unsupportable by any current theory. It is generally believed that the Universe is much bigger than the observable universe, and that there is no preferential position (in 3D) within it.Zarathustra wrote:If we assume the known Universe is surrounded not by a vacuum, but by matter, does this not explain the acceleration of the expansion of the universe without needing to resort to the positing of a mysterious dark energy? In fact, the force that would seem to be in opposition to gravity would simply be gravity itself. Imagine the known Universe as contained within a bubble as one in swiss cheese, being pulled by gravity to its sides.
Chris
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
Why would this place the earth at the center of the universe? The galaxies are all moving away from eachother, not just away from us. What does this have to do with our relative position in all this?
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
How can it not mean the Earth would be in the center? Since we see everything moving away from us at a speed (and acceleration) that depends on distance, and is isotropic, your shell of attractive matter would have to be centered on us. Otherwise, our observation wouldn't be isotropic.Zarathustra wrote:Why would this place the earth at the center of the universe? The galaxies are all moving away from eachother, not just away from us. What does this have to do with our relative position in all this?
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
How does the theory of dark energy explain these observations without placing us at the center?
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
Because dark energy isn't an attractive force. It is (theoretically) a property of space itself, and is repulsive. So over cosmological distances, there is a slight counter "force" to gravity, thus increasing the rate of expansion. That effect will look the same no matter where you are in the Universe (the entire universe or just the observable universe).Zarathustra wrote:How does the theory of dark energy explain these observations without placing us at the center?
BTW, I think you need to consider causal distance with your suggestion. A massive sphere doesn't exert any gravitational force on its contents, so to get the behavior you describe, you would need to carefully size it so that some material was too far away from distant walls to have been affected yet (given the finite age of the Universe). Even then, I'm not sure you would see what we actually observe- I'd have to give that some more thought.
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
Yes, I see what you mean.
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Beyond the universe
This is probably a stupid question, or the wrong place to ask it...please be gentle with me.
I have been having a big argument with a friend about what is beyond the universe. I say nothing at all. He says the universe must be expanding into something and that that something is black. I think black is 'something', and so can't be beyond the universe. Help!
I have been having a big argument with a friend about what is beyond the universe. I say nothing at all. He says the universe must be expanding into something and that that something is black. I think black is 'something', and so can't be beyond the universe. Help!
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Re: Beyond the universe
What is nothing? Void? Space? Vacuum? I think even nothing is something.
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Smile today; tomorrow's another day!
Smile today; tomorrow's another day!
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Re: Beyond the universe
Blimey! I can see this is going to be even more complicated than I thought! By 'nothing' I mean the total absence of anything at all. Void, space and vacuum, I agree, are all 'something'.
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Re: Beyond the universe
Private message has been sent the enquirer relating to what biblical scripture says is beyond the universe.
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Re: Beyond the universe
Quantifying anything outside the universe is kind of like remembering events that occurred before you were born. Since there is no possible system of measurement for comparison, any hypothesis on extra-universal events are untestable and therefore meaningless.
Kinda anti-climactic, but well, there it is.
Kinda anti-climactic, but well, there it is.
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
But we haven't seen to the limits of the universe yet. Perhaps, if we do, we will find the universe shaped like an oval with us located in one end of the oval. As you have said, there is already indication that the universe is asymmetric. Further .. Dark Energy is at this stage pure speculation, as is Dark Matter, as are my anti-gravity bubbles.Chris Peterson wrote:How can it not mean the Earth would be in the center? Since we see everything moving away from us at a speed (and acceleration) that depends on distance, and is isotropic, your shell of attractive matter would have to be centered on us. Otherwise, our observation wouldn't be isotropic.Zarathustra wrote:Why would this place the earth at the center of the universe? The galaxies are all moving away from eachother, not just away from us. What does this have to do with our relative position in all this?
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Re: Beyond the universe
Two to Five years maximum we will have found, with the instruments being built today, what lies beyond the universe.Orca wrote:Quantifying anything outside the universe is kind of like remembering events that occurred before you were born. Since there is no possible system of measurement for comparison, any hypothesis on extra-universal events are untestable and therefore meaningless.
Kinda anti-climactic, but well, there it is.
Duty done .. the rain will stop as promised with the rainbow.
"Abandon the Consensus for Individual Thought"
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Re: Beyond the universe
if, by definition, universe is everything we know about, then there is nothing we know about beyond it. could be something we dont know about, but as soon we'll know it is included and no longer beyond.
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
Well, the observational evidence is strongly in favor of a flat universe (that is, flat in four dimensions), so "oval" doesn't really seem to work (assuming the shape is extended to its 4D equivalent; certainly there is no reason to think that in 3D the Universe has any shape at all).aristarchusinexile wrote:But we haven't seen to the limits of the universe yet. Perhaps, if we do, we will find the universe shaped like an oval with us located in one end of the oval.
Not the Universe, but the observable universe. The two are probably very different. The Universe as a whole can be highly uniform, and we could still see variability on the much smaller scale of observable universes. Lots of observation and analysis remains in this area.As you have said, there is already indication that the universe is asymmetric.
I agree that your anti-gravity bubbles are pure speculation, even fantasy, as there is no theory describing them, their behavior, or how they fit in with observation. "Speculation" is the wrong word for both DE and DM, however. These are solid concepts backed by observation and testable theory. They are far from speculative (as most people would interpret that word), even if there remains much research to understand them (or the effects attributed to them).Further .. Dark Energy is at this stage pure speculation, as is Dark Matter, as are my anti-gravity bubbles.
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Re: The end of the Universe - Alternative to dark energy.
Nah, I think it is dodecahedron.aristarchusinexile wrote:Perhaps, if we do, we will find the universe shaped like an oval with us located in one end of the oval.