The Daoists, who were great observers, developed a tremendous understanding of the nature of life. What they couldn't do is kill millions of people with a single gadget. That took a better understanding of chemistry (which begins with direct observation and intuition, e.g. alchemy). Unfortunately, much ancient knowledge which is quite superior is being lost. The good news is that it can be recovered by direct observation and creative intuition. — Rich
Please read the previous posts. You barge in and expect us to start all over again. That is not reasonable. — Hachem
As I said before, we'll have to wait for someone who knows more than I to carry this on further. — T Clark
One explanation is that it is moving away from you very fast, or another explanation is that you are moving away from it very fast. Directionality is the key here. — MikeL
They could also all be contracting toward their centre, in which case they are also all moving away from each other. — MikeL
Imagine space as a matrix full of dots or circles. The dots are contracting away from each other, the centre most parts contracting fastest. — MikeL
But say you could establish a contraction scenario that is exactly symmetric to the expansion scenario, what have you achieved but another way of saying the same thing? It wouldn't advance the science if it hasn't changed the science.
However the two directions make different predictions once we add in a conservation of energy constraint. Now one direction will cool radiation by stretching it, or redshifting it. The other will heat radiation by contracting it, or blue-shifting it. — apokrisis
In a hypothetical universe undergoing a runaway big crunch contraction, a cosmological blueshift would be observed, with galaxies further away being increasingly blueshifted; the exact opposite of the actually observed cosmological redshift in the present expanding universe.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blueshift
The metric expansion of space is the increase of the distance between two distant parts of the universe with time.[1] It is an intrinsic expansion whereby the scale of space itself changes. It means that the early universe did not expand "into" anything and does not require space to exist "outside" the universe - instead space itself changed, carrying the early universe with it as it grew. This is a completely different kind of expansion than expansions and explosions we see in daily life. It also seems to be a property of the entire universe as a whole rather than a phenomenon that applies just to one part of the universe or can be observed from "outside" it.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_expansion_of_space
The contraction doesn't have to be directional toward a centre point. — MikeL
In a contracting model, the ratio of distances only grows larger, just as in expansion — MikeL
In a contracting model, the ratio of distances only grows larger, just as in expansion
— MikeL
I still don't understand how you're reaching that conclusion. — Sapientia
Anyone can come up with ideas like that or like your petrol can, but if they don't really add anything, or, worse, if they actually detract from what we have, and create more problems than resolutions, then that doesn't go in their favour. Raising possibilities is one thing, solving problems is another. — Sapientia
It apparent growth in the ratio would be a summative effect over distance. — MikeL
Apokrisis has steered me right though on this point. You are welcome to check out the previous comments. — MikeL
A blueshift is any decrease in wavelength, with a corresponding increase in frequency, of an electromagnetic wave; the opposite effect is referred to as redshift. In visible light, this shifts the color from the red end of the spectrum to the blue end.
Are you incapable or unwilling? — Sapientia
The whole of space can expand and contract. Furthermore, Einstein’s equation shows that space cannot stand still; it must be expanding. In 1930 the expansion of the universe was actually observed. The same equation predicts that the expansion ought to have been triggered by the explosion of a young, extremely small and extremely hot universe: by what we now know as the ‘Big Bang’. Once again, no one believed this at first, but the proof mounted up until cosmic background radiation – the diffuse glare that remains from the heat generated by the original explosion – was actually observed in the sky. The prediction arising from Einstein’s equation turned out to be correct. — Carlo Rovelli, Seven Brief Lessons On Physics
All of this is the result of an elementary intuition: that space and gravitational field are the same thing. And of a simple equation which I cannot resist giving here, even though you will almost certainly not be able to decipher it. Perhaps anyone reading this will still be able to appreciate its wonderful simplicity:
R ab − ½ R g ab = T ab
That’s it.
You would, of course, need to study and digest Riemann’s mathematics in order to master the technique to read and use this equation. It takes a little commitment and effort. But less than is necessary to come to appreciate the rarefied beauty of a late Beethoven string quartet. In both cases the reward is sheer beauty, and new eyes with which to see the world. — Carlo Rovelli, Seven Brief Lessons On Physics
So, there we have it. Einstein's equation shows that the universe must be expanding, and this expansion has been observed. — Sapientia
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