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Originally posted by biggmoneyme
if im not mistaken ,according to vedas the uiverse is 150 trillion years old and will live to be 300 trillion years.
The later puranic view asserts that the universe is created, destroyed, and re-created in an eternally repetitive series of cycles. In Hindu cosmology, a universe endures for about 4,320,000,000 years (one day of Brahma, the creator or kalpa)[6] and is then destroyed by fire or water elements. At this point, Brahma rests for one night, just as long as the day. This process, named pralaya (Cataclysm), repeats for 100 Brahma years (311 trillion, 40 billion human years) that represents Brahma's lifespan.
Originally posted by OmegaLogos
reply to post by Pokoia
Explanation: S&F!
The universe is not homgenous in age ... this is down to GRAVITY ..which via black holes clear affects the passage of TIME!
From OUR limited point of view the universe we see is 13.7 billion yrs old.
But around a supermassive blackhole created early on in the universes growth .. the time has almost come to a standstill and for them the universal age might only be a few billion years!
Conversely the huge massive voids, where there is very little gravity, time is not restricted by gravity and so has a rate way faster than what we ourselves percieve! From the center of one of these voids the age of the universe is 18+ to 20+ billion yrs [simulated].
[EDIT: REDACTED BY OL to comply with ATS quotation rules. please see linked thread for full story.]
Personal Disclosure: I hope that answers the basic questions raised by this thread's OP!
P.S. The rate of time experienced in the voids is clearly why the expansion of the universe is speeding up!
Where does the article or linked paper suggest this discovery has cast doubt on the age of the Universe?
It doesn't.
Originally posted by Drunkenparrot
reply to post by XPLodER
Where does the article or linked paper suggest this discovery has cast doubt on the age of the Universe?
It doesn't.
Honestly ATS, 3 pages of Einstein was wrong supported individually by some really basic fundamental misconceptions, I guess its not really surprising nobody has bothered to read what was actually said?
This is the most distant yet observed gravitational lensing event, which is still well within possibility under the current theory of 14 billion years.
The OP appears to have made the rest up.
Ironically, as I understand it, this discovery actually supports current cosmological theory by expounding on early galactic cluster formation.
This unique system constitutes the most distant cluster known to "host" a giant gravitationally lensed arc. Finding this ancient gravitational arc may yield insight into how, during the first moments after the Big Bang, conditions were set up for the growth of hefty clusters in the early universe.
The arc was spotted in optical images of the cluster taken in 2010 by Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys. The infrared capabilities of Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 helped provide a precise distance, confirming it to be one of the farthest clusters yet discovered.
"The chance of finding such a gigantic cluster so early in the universe was less than one percent in the small area we surveyed," said team member Mark Brodwin of the University of Missouri-Kansas City. "It shares an evolutionary path with some of the most massive clusters we see today, including the Coma cluster and the recently discovered El Gordo cluster."
An analysis of the arc revealed that the lensed object is a star-forming galaxy that existed 10 billion to 13 billion years ago. The team hopes to use Hubble again to obtain a more accurate distance to the lensed galaxy.
This title linked to the Rare case of gravitational lensing reported article belongs in skunk works or the grey area, not science and technology as it is only the OP's personal interpretation, not what was actually said, implied or discovered.edit on 27-6-2012 by Drunkenparrot because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by circlemaker
Just a vague "throwing this out there", so for whatever it's worth...
If our universe is a black hole, then it may be part of a larger universe (or the same one existing at a different point in time... pretty boggling). Anyway what I'm getting at is that perhaps previously existing galaxies were sucked in and became a part of it. Even stranger... maybe when they're sucked in they appear further back in time. Like galaxy A and then galaxy B get sucked in, but now galaxy B is in the past relative to galaxy A.
Anyway... Just having fun theorizing.
Originally posted by OmegaLogos
reply to post by Drunkenparrot
Explanation: St*rred!
Where does the article or linked paper suggest this discovery has cast doubt on the age of the Universe?
It doesn't.
I agree and this thread should be in skunkworks! :shk:
But to go back to the topic ... the OP does ask some valid questions!
Personal Disclosure: Maybe you might be able to answer them and the topic will be resolved!
or galaxy A is galaxy B but in the past!!! and if it was never sucked in to the black hole i the future then it would never had existed in the past as galaxy A to become galaxy B after being sucked in!!
Originally posted by XPLodER
reply to post by DARREN1976
or galaxy A is galaxy B but in the past!!! and if it was never sucked in to the black hole i the future then it would never had existed in the past as galaxy A to become galaxy B after being sucked in!!
are you trying to crash my brain?,
talk about logic loops
interesting
the recycling universe theory
lol
xploder
Originally posted by Drunkenparrot
reply to post by XPLodER
XPLodER, I know gravitational lensing is an interest of yours. I have read quite a few of your threads and have learned a lot of great stuff in the process
My belief is that in this particular instance your represetation of the content from the linked article was disingenuous. The reader is left with the perception that the research team who made the discovery were implying that it challenged the currently accepted age of the universe when in truth, that is your personal opinion.
The phys.org article clearly articulates the belief that this newest find will allow further refinement of existing theory, not overturn the foundations of cosmology.
I realise this is ATS however, IMHO, the intellectual sleight of hand doesn't belong in the science forum.
Originally posted by pauljs75
If you look at the effects of relativity on the passage of time, like how it slows down due to gravity in the presence of black holes, then it seems to me like there should be no universal standard for the passage of time. Keeping that in regard, there could be regions of space much older than the one we inhabit, but based on current theory would appear much younger. And vice versa.
In other words, the speed of light is tied to the clock somehow, and in a gravitational field that speeds light up and slows it down allowing it to be lensed it's not just light but also the "clock" that's being messed with. If somebody can prove that time in the observable universe is far from being uniform, there might be a better theory to understand what's going on here.
Although it's sci-fi fantasy, the joke about "wibbly wobbly timey wimey stuff" in Dr. Who might have a little ring of truth to it.
The researchers explored several different explanations for how such a large quantity of dust could disappear so rapidly, and each of their explanations challenges conventional thinking about planet formation.