- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
re: No matter what direction we point a telescope, we always look toward the Big Bang - why?
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:22 am to StringedInstruments
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:22 am to StringedInstruments
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:25 am to jacobforpresident
quote:
My understanding is that the "big bang" marks the beginning of the expansion of space outward from a single point
The hardest thing to conceptualize about the big bang is that it happened everywhere all at once. It's hard to comprehend the size and scale of it when we try to fit it in the context of explosions we observe on earth.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:27 am to tom
quote:
The farther away you look, the older what you see is. So if you are looking billions of light years away in any direction, you are looking at light that is billions of years old.
Allegedly.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:28 am to Wiener
quote:
The hardest thing to conceptualize about the big bang is that it happened everywhere all at once.
Only if you define everything as everything in the reach or influence of the big bang.
An explosion is an explosion. It's just a matter of scale. How do you apply that to what we're observing?
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:31 am to squid_hunt
quote:
His question is if the earth is not the center of the universe, why is there space 13 billion light years in all directions in a 13.8 billion year old universe.
The earth is the center of the universe, so is everywhere else. Duh.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:32 am to StringedInstruments
quote:
No matter what direction we point a telescope, we always look toward the Big Bang - why?
Because they’re always running reruns. Sheldon isn’t that funny. Stop it already.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:33 am to Kentucker
quote:
According to the standard models there was no space and time before the Big Bang. There was not even a "before" to speak of. So, the Big Bang was very different from any explosion we are accustomed to and it does not need to have a central point.
That sounds an awful lot like some “we don’t know but want to claim we do” bullshite
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:34 am to squid_hunt
quote:
Only if you define everything as everything in the reach or influence of the big bang.
I believe we call that the "universe".
quote:
An explosion is an explosion. It's just a matter of scale. How do you apply that to what we're observing?
The big bang was a universal explosion. Trying to fit it in the box of it being just another explosion really limits the ability to describe what (theoretically) happened.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:35 am to StringedInstruments
Because you are thinking of the Big Bang as an explosion IN space, and material moves away from it.
The Big Bang was an explosion OF space. Where the mass within increases the spaces between each other.
This is also why Webb telescope finds its value. Over a long enough distance, the expansion of space begins to have an effect on the movement of light, causing a Doppler effect (how a car sounds different when it’s coming towards you vs when it’s moving away). This effect shifts light more to the red end of the spectrum, turning visible light (what Hubble sees) to infrared light (what Webb sees). This is why Webb is citied as being able to see further than Hubble could.
The long range stuff doesn’t appear in the wavelengths Hubble can see.
The Big Bang was an explosion OF space. Where the mass within increases the spaces between each other.
This is also why Webb telescope finds its value. Over a long enough distance, the expansion of space begins to have an effect on the movement of light, causing a Doppler effect (how a car sounds different when it’s coming towards you vs when it’s moving away). This effect shifts light more to the red end of the spectrum, turning visible light (what Hubble sees) to infrared light (what Webb sees). This is why Webb is citied as being able to see further than Hubble could.
The long range stuff doesn’t appear in the wavelengths Hubble can see.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:36 am to FutureMikeVIII
quote:
The earth is the center of the universe, so is everywhere else.
I mean, if that's what you're going with.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:37 am to Kankles
quote:
Because that’s how God made it
There is no principled reason for any religious person to turn away from the physical sciences. If God made everything and placed it here for us to discover and be impressed, how can a Godly person turn away from it or deny its existence? If you believe in creation, that should give you a greater incentive to witness and try to understand what was created for you.
When given a wrapped gift, the only thing to do is open it.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:38 am to Dawgfanman
quote:
That sounds an awful lot like some “we don’t know but want to claim we do” bullshite
That's how theories work. There's something you don't know and you postulate how based on information you have currently. From there you search for evidence to support it or disprove it. Not sure why there's such animosity toward that process nowadays.
Is it bullshite? Time will tell. For now, it's the theory with the best evidence to support it.
This post was edited on 7/28/22 at 8:42 am
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:41 am to Wiener
quote:
I believe we call that the "universe".
Right. It's still a limited set. It assumes without evidence that the universe is everything there is and there is nothing outside it.
My point is this:
quote:
The big bang was a universal explosion.
Does not explain why a limited envelope of matter surrounds us apparently equally in all directions.
Models of the big bang generally show either a shotgun blast or a central explosion going off in opposing directions.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:43 am to DarthRebel
quote:
It is easier and more logical to believe in God, than the Big Bang.
Yes, throwing your hands up in the air and just saying, "magic," is always easier. The magic man did it, and his ways are mysterious. That's literally always the easiest answer.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:44 am to TBoy
quote:
If God made everything and placed it here for us to discover and be impressed, how can a Godly person turn away from it or deny its existence?
A 13 billion year old universe with evolution negates original sin and Christ's redemption. It makes the Bible a lie. It is just as reasonable to assume that science is biased by a need to disprove God and the Bible, since, you know, since it's been said over and over.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:45 am to StringedInstruments
quote:
Say the United States and China each had a “James Webb” kind of telescope on the ground. We both point them in opposite directions towards a patch of the sky at the same time. If both telescopes could see back 13.8 billion years, they’d both see the Big Bang.
Like a perspective drawing from a flat earth, now we’ve done it.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:45 am to TBoy
quote:
There is no principled reason for any religious person to turn away from the physical sciences.
What religious are turning away from science. Its because of the Church we have basis of the scientific methods we use today-- the only people rejecting science today are the climatologists.
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:50 am to squid_hunt
quote:
It is just as reasonable to assume that science is biased by a need to disprove God and the Bible, since, you know, since it's been said over and over.
Lol, no. That’s a strawman advanced by biblical literalists who feel attacked by advancing knowledge. Science literally doesn’t give a shite about god, since by definition supernatural shite is not testable.
This post was edited on 7/28/22 at 8:51 am
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:50 am to Abstract Queso Dip
Do we know in which direction we are heading? Can we know and look back at the spot of the proposed singularity?
Is the light emitted from stars that are farther down the path we are headed different in some manner from the light emitted from stars that trail us in our path?
Is the light emitted from stars that are farther down the path we are headed different in some manner from the light emitted from stars that trail us in our path?
Posted on 7/28/22 at 8:52 am to FutureMikeVIII
quote:
Science is literally doesn’t give a shite about god, since by definition supernatural shite is not testable.
It's not. You're lying. But if you want to siderail this into a science vs the Bible debate go for it. You're being a douche. I have approached the topic under the assumptions provided and responded rationally. Maybe take your hobby horse elsewhere.
Popular
Back to top
Follow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News