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Originally posted by jiggerj
I've always been bothered by the fact that the galaxies we see are not galaxies, but only the light from those galaxies that has traveled millions of years to reach us. Meaning that all those galaxies are long gone. Right?
The article doesn't say anything about gravity. There is no evidence gravity travels at the speed of quantum entanglement that I've seen.
Originally posted by stormcell
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
It has? Where? You mean by the guy the OP says is wrong?
Originally posted by stormcell
It's also been proven that gravity travels fast than the speed of light, around 10,000x faster.
From this article stating that quantum entanglement must be at least 10000x times the speed of light. That would then include gravity:
www.gizmag.com...
Originally posted by stormcell
Originally posted by Arbitrageur
It has? Where? You mean by the guy the OP says is wrong?
Originally posted by stormcell
It's also been proven that gravity travels fast than the speed of light, around 10,000x faster.
From this article stating that quantum entanglement must be at least 10000x times the speed of light. That would then include gravity:
www.gizmag.com...
Originally posted by LABTECH767
reply to post by AnarchoCapitalist
Well there goes my own theory as I had an alternative explanation for the perceived acceleration of the universe expansion to the dark energy theory, if this has not been already taken into account that is. S+F.
Originally posted by wildespace
Originally posted by jiggerj
I've always been bothered by the fact that the galaxies we see are not galaxies, but only the light from those galaxies that has traveled millions of years to reach us. Meaning that all those galaxies are long gone. Right?
No. Galaxies don't just disappear into thin air (well, into thin vacuum), they exist for billions and billions of years. Sometimes they merge, get absorbed into a larger galaxy, or get torn to bits through gravitational interaction, but otherwise they carry on existing. It will probably take many trillions of years before most stars in galaxies die. The universe is "only" around 13.8 billion years old.
Originally posted by jiggerj
You missed the point. All those distant galaxies that we see are from when they were a million years ago, or even fifty thousand years ago, or 20 million years ago... Point being, they aren't there now. We are not seeing the galaxies as they are now, or from where they are now.
The nearer galaxies haven't changed much in the time it takes the light to reach us as wildespace said.
Originally posted by jiggerj
You missed the point. All those distant galaxies that we see are from when they were a million years ago, or even fifty thousand years ago, or 20 million years ago... Point being, they aren't there now. We are not seeing the galaxies as they are now, or from where they are now.
Originally posted by EasyPleaseMe
Originally posted by LABTECH767
reply to post by AnarchoCapitalist
Well there goes my own theory as I had an alternative explanation for the perceived acceleration of the universe expansion to the dark energy theory, if this has not been already taken into account that is. S+F.
Tell us your theory then!
Originally posted by LABTECH767
reply to post by LABTECH767
In reprise there fore the inverse universe is only there for an instant and the gravity that brought it into being remains longer than the universe that the inversion or white hole formed into, the time inside that TSC is faster relative to the flow of time in the external TSC and as the black hole undergoes quantum evaporation it can be perceived that the internal TSC will by the effective end of the black hole have reached both entropy and spaghetification but maybe no and the quantum evaporation of the BH may lead instead to isolated pockets of TSC with differential time rates making our universe a bit like a sponge if you could look at it were each TSC was one of the holes in the sponge, now maybe they are not independent but other than dimensional travel I can think of no work around to travel between TSC.
As the TSC all reach old age the time rate variation between them will even out and eventually reach equilibrium.