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It seems more reasonable to me to extend the cosmological principle to say that no location in the universe is "special" and no scale in the universe is "special."
So can we be shocked every time there is evidence that the observable universe has anisotropy?
Does the cosmological principle dictate isotropy?
Talking of "local" effects that are very "large"... some researchers have suggested that the filaments of the cosmic web are spinning.https://www.space.com/largest-spinning-structures-universe-discoveredCould this be evidence for cosmic strings?https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmic_string#Gravitation
I don't see the connection between spinning filaments of the cosmic web and cosmic strings.
Eternal Student's "preferred scale" is precisely what I am having difficulty seeing as an accurate depiction.....
What is this preferred scale? Is there an unambiguous cutoff (that can be calculated like an even horizon?) Or is it just the idea that in the limit of larger and larger volumes, randomness balances out?
I think you (we) need to establish more firmly what definition or notion of the cosmological principle you are using before I (we) can discuss many specific details.
I think what my question down to is this: does the definition of "local anisotropy" scale with the scale that is being considered? ie if we are considering orbital mechanics in a solar system, we care about stellar- and planetary-sized anisotropies; and if we care about galactic motions, then individual galaxies or even superclusters could be considered "local anisotropies." Is this a correct interpretation?
And if so, would it be reasonable to say that "local anisotropies" can be arbitrarily large?
I cannot think of any structure larger than about 500 Mpc
Perhaps we could also say that we can't observe any larger structures (with our current technology).- We see distant quasars that happen to be beaming radiation in our direction, but that is hardly a representative sample...