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I read that supernova neutrinos 'reach Earth hours before the light produced in the explosion'. Of course my question is going to be how do these neutrinos travel faster than the speed of light and reach Earth 'hours' ahead of the light?
What developed first after the big bang , neutrino's or light?
Hi Halc. That explains that then! It's a typical knee jerk reaction from a newbie like myself when he thinks, hey something DOES travel faster than light! I guess that if the article was aimed at a non scientist like myself then it would have said the neutrinos get to Earth earlier than the light 'because ...'.
Quote from: Harri on 10/03/2020 13:30:39Hi Halc. That explains that then! It's a typical knee jerk reaction from a newbie like myself when he thinks, hey something DOES travel faster than light! I guess that if the article was aimed at a non scientist like myself then it would have said the neutrinos get to Earth earlier than the light 'because ...'.You too can travel faster than the speed of light, quite easily actually.https://abcnews.go.com/Technology/story?id=99111&page=1
Is it likely/possible that neutrinos then are travelling faster than the universe is expanding?
If a neutrino were to reach the edge of the universe (let's just imagine there is one) what would be the outcome?
My basic understanding is that nothing could leave the universe as the amount of energy in the universe remains constant.
So in simplistic terms is it fair to say that the expanding universe isn't expanding at a particular speed but rather, everything is receding away from everything else at an increasing rate ?
This rate depends on certain universal factors.
Ha ha you threw it right back at me, what would happen if a neutrino reached the edge of the universe? I'm guessing there might be an edge to the universe but not an edge to space.
Everything that reaches the edge of the universe just expands the universe into space. I'd love to know if that makes sense to you or not.