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To me it seems like these Three Forces are in action against gravity, keeping the particles, that form matter and its mass From quickly collapsing in on itself. Which is why objects with more mass possess more gravity, but all matter more or less is affected by it.
Astyanax
reply to post by Mon1k3r
It is, actually; you just don't see it, probably because you're not too familiar with general relativity. No shame in that; it's a tough subject.
This, too, is incorrect:
For example, a cosmologist looks at distant galaxies and realizes that the universe is expanding, or inflating, as it were. But he cannot quite make the connection that if that type of inflation is occurring at the macrocosmic level, it is indeed also happening at the microcosmic level. Thus he himself, and his entire environment is inflating at a uniform rate.
It is only interstellar space, far from significant gravitational influences, that expands. In the vicinity of galaxies and their components, the metric expansion of space does not apply. Neither do physical objects expand along with space.
Arbitrageur
Scientists question if what they are observing is accurate probably more than you realize.
Basically I'm asking why Quantum Theory and The Principals of Relativity don't work together
It exists within us just as much as we exist in it. To assume that inflation of space would not apply to us, simply because it can't be observed, is just egotistical.
I think you missed the whole point of the sources I posted, which is, they are looking for things we think are not there, like variability of "constants".
Mon1k3r
We need to stop looking for what is there, and start looking for those things we 'think' are not.
It exists within us just as much as we exist in it. To assume that inflation of space would not apply to us, simply because it can't be observed, is just egotistical.
Correct. Actually I can provide an interesting reference for the truly pedantic, which in in a way supports both apparently contradictory claims that the expansion of the universe does affect local systems and the claim that it does not affect local systems. Hopefully the nature of the calculation reveals how both claims can be true and what may or may not be observed:
Astyanax
It's not an assumption, you silly person. It arises from the physics..
Here is the Cooperstock paper to which he refers:
For the technically minded, Cooperstock et al. computes that the influence of the cosmological expansion on the Earth's orbit around the Sun amounts to a growth by only one part in a septillion over the age of the Solar System. This effect is caused by the cosmological background density within the Solar System going down as the Universe expands, which may or may not happen depending on the nature of the dark matter. The mass loss of the Sun due to its luminosity and the Solar wind leads to a much larger [but still tiny] growth of the Earth's orbit which has nothing to do with the expansion of the Universe. Even on the much larger (million light year) scale of clusters of galaxies, the effect of the expansion of the Universe is 10 million times smaller than the gravitational binding of the cluster.
I don't follow your logic here. If everything was expanding at a uniform rate, including all of our "yardsticks" we use to measure distance, then we wouldn't measure any increase on large scales either, would we?
Mon1k3r
The trouble with the concept is that if everything, and I mean EVERYTHING is expanding at a uniform rate, from the very, very small, to the interstellar scale, we would not be able to observe this, because from our reference, everything would seem to be the same size all the time, regardless of expansion or inflation. We can only really notice this inflation on very large scales, because those are the scales on which it is observable.
AfterInfinity
reply to post by FatherStacks
Is there no conversion step? Is there no midway point at which one translates into the other? Not even a hybrid which reconciles the two and determines the differences?
Arbitrageur
I don't follow your logic here. If everything was expanding at a uniform rate, including all of our "yardsticks" we use to measure distance, then we wouldn't measure any increase on large scales either, would we?
There aren't any magical forces that do this, but there are natural forces that affect expansion of space (the fundamental known forces of gravity, electroweak force and strong nuclear force.)
Mon1k3r
There is no magical force field around local groups, individual galaxies, stars, planets, or human bodies, or even atoms that absolve them from the expansion of that which makes their existence possible.