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The current estimate of the age of the universe is about 13.8 billion years, yet the furthest object known is 13.4 billion light years away from us. That only leaves 0.4 billion years difference. How is this explained?
Also if nothing can exceed the speed of light
that implies that the universe is expanding at the speed of light?
In the same way that the speed of sound is a natural constant.
Quote from: charles1948 on 01/02/2021 19:21:04In the same way that the speed of sound is a natural constant. It isn't.But the speed of light in a vacuum is a constant.And we know from both theoretical considerations, and from practical experience, that you can't get anything to go faster.
Everywhere on Earth, sound travels at the same speed.
Suppose the speed of light is a natural constant. Throughout the Universe.
In the 18th Century we knew, from theoretical considerations, and practical experience, that we couldn't get anything to go faster than a galloping horse or a sailing ship.
Suppose the speed of light is a natural constant. Throughout the Universe.In the same way that the speed of sound is a natural constant. Throughout the Earth. Everywhere on Earth, sound travels at the same speed.But that didn't stop us devising "supersonic" aircraft to exceed the speed of sound. So couldn't we devise "superluminal" spacecraft to exceed the the speed of light?