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They probably meant the edge of the visible universe. Since light travels at a finite speed, it can only have traveled a certain distance in the 14 billion years the universe has been around. The light which can reach us defines a giant sphere (radius = 14 billion parsecs) around the earth. If something is further away than that, its light won't have reached us yet. Since light-speed is the speed limit for everything in the universe, nothing from beyond this region will have reached us yet, and so we don't know what's beyond it. Most scientists tend to believe in the cosmological principle, which says that the universe is pretty much the same everywhere, at least on large scales. Therefore, it should be basically the same outside our visible universe as it is inside. There's a lot more details here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe
Correct in principle; but aren't the maths a bit awry? 1pc = 3.26 light years. Therefore the edge of the visible universe is 14billion/3.26 parsecs, not 14 billion parsecs.
Socratus - I assume your 2.7K refers to the CMBR. Surely, that can't ever reach 0K as that would imply zero energy level and QM says that is impossible.
Quote from: DoctorBeaver on 04/10/2008 11:30:24Correct in principle; but aren't the maths a bit awry? 1pc = 3.26 light years. Therefore the edge of the visible universe is 14billion/3.26 parsecs, not 14 billion parsecs.The extra distance is due to the expansion of the universe. I didn't discuss that detail since it's a bit tricky to grasp. The light has been traveling at c, but the space between us and those distant stars has stretched. Your numbers are right if the universe is static.
46 billion light years (14 parsecs) away.
jpQuote46 billion light years (14 parsecs) away. ??1pc is only 3.26ly, actually. You mean 14 billion pc, I think.
We've a long way to go yet.