According to you to, relativity doesn't work? — tim wood
But at what large-scale does it break down? — tim wood
1 - the size of the universe, which on current estimates is more than 98bn light years across - and therefore more than 4 times the widest spread that could be achieved by an exploding singularity at the speed of light. — Gary Enfield
Must have? Is that what you think too?they must have traveled faster than the speed of light. — Metaphysician Undercover
www.youtube.com/watch?v=vIJTwYOZrGU — tim wood
I really don't see why faster than light possibilities are such a feared thing to consider. — Gary Enfield
A review of the videos will persuade anyone that the whole matter is just plain not that simple. For example, what exactly is the speed of light? What does it mean? How and by whom measured, under what circumstances and contexts. — tim wood
Well, apart from the laws of physics becoming inconsistent... yeah, what are folk worried about. — Banno
I think Gary explained it to you quite well. If I understood correctly, what he said was that for the (material) parts of the universe to get to where they are right now, from the big bang, they must have traveled faster than the speed of light. I did not check his math, but I think this is what he was saying anyway. Does it not make sense to you? — Metaphysician Undercover
Those equations also show that no mass can travel faster than the speed of light. — Banno
Maxwell's equations only demonstrate how we consistently perceive light. — Gary Enfield
They only do this I believe because they assume a fixed c. — Gary Enfield
Seems far more likely that you haven't quite grasped relativistic physics. — Banno
The age of the universe is now agreed at approx 13.7 billion years.
An explosion at the speed of light would travel outwards 13.7 billion light years in that time.
However that is only a radius, so that distance has to be doubled for the diameter.
So 27.4 billion light years should therefore be the maximum diameter but scientists/cosmologists agree that the universe is at least 96billion light years across. — Gary Enfield
General Relativity is about curved space-time... — Banno
You are inhabited by some strange mind which thinks it knows what it obviously does not. So you haven't the foggiest clue how to explain anything. — Metaphysician Undercover
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