Chris Peterson wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 7:50 pm
lefthip wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 7:44 pm
As a believer in the scientific principle, the universe can only be that which we can detect by sight or otherwise. Multiverses or the infinite universe are only conjectures, although reasonable hypotheses, and may ultimately prove to be correct. But, right now our universe is a sphere of about 13.5 billion light years diameter.
Or is it? Do we know where we sit in this sphere in relation to its centre? I would assume that it is not the centre, as that would be very statistically unlikely. So, if we can "see" 13.5 billion light years, shouldn't we be able to say with some significant degree of certainty that the universe is actually much larger. We have discovered the redshift which suggests the all galaxies are moving away from each other. Couldn't these redshifts be triangulated to point to a centre and calculate its position (in relation to everything else)?
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Theory and a wealth of supportive evidence argue against the Universe being a sphere. An
observable universe is spherical. Not
the Universe. In three dimensions, the Universe has no center and no edges, although we can reasonably argue that every 3D point within it represents a center point with respect to everything else.
The only "edge" that makes any sense is the 3D surface that everything exists on, and which is expanding outward along the time axis... an axis we have no access to in either direction.
Theory can reasonably support either an open or closed universe, a finite or an infinite universe. The jury is still out in that regard. But we can very reasonably say that the edge of the observable universe lies 46 billion light years away, not 13.5 billion.
Chris, haven't you said that the edge of the Universe is the Big Bang (or whatever we choose to call the very beginning of the Universe - some say that inflation came before the Big Bang)?
As for whether the Universe is open or closed, shouldn't we, at least as a starting point, use Occam's Razor and choose the simplest answer? So that, if the Universe is flat, it is most likely open (and only topology can change that)?
Of course, we are not sure if the Universe is really, truly, absolutely flat. It could be marginally, marginally spherical, and therefore finite and closed.
Ann