• JohnDClay
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    14 hours ago

    Is the radial scale logarithmic? Or is it even more compressed than that?

      • JohnDClay
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        14 hours ago

        If we assume the hubble constant is the same in all directions, the farthest we’d be able to see would be a sphere, dictated by the time light has had to travel to us.

        • Grimpen@lemmy.ca
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          12 hours ago

          That’s what I’m assuming the original diagram is showing, the “Observable Universe” in some sort of radically increasing scale.

        • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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          12 hours ago

          I’ll admit, I’m not deep in astronomy but thats inherently misguided. In a 3d space, observing from a fixed point, all areas that extend past how far we can observe would not be the shape of the universe but just our range of “vision.”

          • Tinidril@midwest.social
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            9 hours ago

            Thus the term “observable universe”. Everything beyond our observable universe is being expanded away from us at faster than the speed of light, so nothing outside will ever reach us. Causality is completely and irrevocably severed at those distances so, arguably, anything outside the observable universe is not part of “our” universe.

            • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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              9 hours ago

              My point is, it doesn’t reveal anything about the nature of the universe only about the limited view we can observe. As far as form goes the form of a sphere is meaningless because it is true of anything in a 3d space that is looking out from a fixed point.

              • Tinidril@midwest.social
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                9 hours ago

                As I just explained, it’s not really about observation, it’s about causation. If two objects can never possibly interact, then are they really in the same universe?

                Looking out in space is also looking back in time. Anything (roughly) that is further than we can observe in the microwave background would be further back in time than the beginning of time, and therefore doesn’t exist at all in our universe. It’s a bit brain bending.

                • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.worldOP
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                  9 hours ago

                  I would say yes they are part of the same universe because if you changed your position it would reveal things you didn’t see before and mask thing you use to see. Not that that is possible yet, but there are no laws of physics preventing it, only our super short life spans.

                  • Tinidril@midwest.social
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                    8 hours ago

                    That’s just it. The laws of physics, at least as far as we understand them, absolutely preclude changing our position in any way that would reveal anything outside our observable universe. Lifespans don’t come into it at all. If you lived forever traveling at the speed of light, you would never achieve that change of position.

                    The cosmic background is the leftover “noise” of the big bang, and we observe it roughly uniformly in every single direction. So where did the big bang occur? Everywhere. Everything that exists is precisely at the center of the universe, right where the big bang happened.

                    It’s all about the concept of spacetime. Spacetime isn’t space and time considered together, it’s a singular thing that operates by rules that we are ill equiped to comprehend intuitively.

      • ewigkaiwelo@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        Is saddle still the best candidate? Like when you move a circle across a circle you get a torus, and when you move a parabola across parabola you get a “saddle”

    • philipp_@discuss.tchncs.de
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      11 hours ago

      It’s not really to scale at all. Look at the distance between earth and the moon in relation to the other planets.