0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.
I am probably completely missing the point here (as I do).....but how can we tell the Universe is 13.8B ?
Quote from: neilep on 29/09/2023 13:47:39I am probably completely missing the point here (as I do).....but how can we tell the Universe is 13.8B ?Not sure what this 'the observable' is, but the age is determined by looking at distant things like galaxies. The simplest way to do it is to measure the Hubble 'constant'. The further away something is, the faster it appears to be receding. So we've managed to measure the recession rate per megaparsec of distance and it comes to around 70 m/sec/mpc, which, if you cancel like units, is almost exactly 1/1.38 billion yearsThat assumes constant expansion, so the actual figure takes varying expansion into account, but our current expansion rate is nearly the average over that time.
From what I understand the Observable Universe is 93 billion light years.
It is often said that we have no idea how big the unobservable is because we shall never see it due to the expansion speed being faster than C.
So, my instinct then is to ask is how can we tell how old the universe is if all we have is the observable universe to deduce from ?
Usual problem of ambiguity about "the universe". For all practical purposes, it means the observable universe. Only human vanity would presume that there is nothing else, so it is entirely reasonable to assume that there is more in the "entire" universe that we can't observe, and therefore cannot meaningfully ascribe any properties such as age. How old is the unobservable fairy who may or may not be standing behind me? Since it is unobservable, it cannot affect me and its age doesn't matter.
Hi. This seems similar to a question you ( @neilep ) posted not too long ago.https://www.thenakedscientists.com/forum/index.php?topic=86145.0There may be some fine differences but I'm not too sure what they are. If you're just looking for fresh answers it's possible to add a new post to the end of that thread - that will automatically push the thread to the top of the pile (the newest). I don't think any moderators would mind provided this sort of "bumping up" isn't done too often (and isn't to promote some product you sell or an idea of your own).In the old thread, @Halc already discussed the method using expansion and the Hubble parameter. @Eternal Student discussed an alternative that is determining the age of stars. I still think those are the two main methods.For further interest @evan_au presented one issue that doesn't seem to fit well: Some galaxies seem too big and well developed - our models don't suggest they would have developed in 13.8 bn years. There is also an issue just about black holes (the usual Galactic Nucleii) - some of these seem too big to have developed through mergers and acquiring other material in just 13.8 bn years. The size of black holes is something we're now getting a lot of data on from gravitational wave astronomy such as that done at the LIGO site. So, if you want to be controversial, there is some evidence that the universe may be older than 13.8 bn years BUT it's also quite possible that our understanding of how black holes and galaxies develop just needs a bit of adjustment.Best Wishes.
So, I figure it's the Observable Universe that is 13.8 Billion years old.
General Relativity (GR) seems to be a fairly good model, it has withstood several tests. Provided that model is right, we do not need to be able to see the whole universe.
A quick question, Halc: taking your example of a time dilation factor of 4, suppose our galaxy was receding slightly faster, say 1.03c, what becomes of the Lorentz factor? It will now be a complex number. Does this feed through to a complex age?
Well, if we're going to go strictly by what relativity says, it posits the entirety of 4D spacetime as 'the universe', and therefore it has no meaningful age at all.
That's not the age of the universe, it's just the time coordinate of humanity in that frame.
As for the 'Earth's frame' bit, one can make the 'current' time as large as you want by picking a different frame. That lets relativity of simultaneity work for you.
So say you want to compute the current age of the universe relative to the (inertialish) frame of some galaxy relative to which our galaxy is moving away at say .97c. In that frame, our clocks are dilated by a factor of 4, so the event on that far galaxy simultaneous with humanity here is somewhere around 55 billion years since the big bang.
It's always a pleasure to hear from you, @Halc. I'm also fairly sure you won't be too offended if I oppose some of your comments.
The phrasing I used was just more like natural English language and that does tend to utilise a tacit assumption of presentism.
The Robertson-Walker metric (which is what is used in main-stream Cosmology) has the form dT2 = dt2 - a(t) ds2 with dT being a proper time interval (a differential) while dt and ds are co-ordinate time and space differentials respectively. a(t) is the scale factor (which is some function of co-ordinate time).
That's not the age of the universe, it's just the time coordinate of humanity in that [or some other] frame.
So, if an object follows a path where the spatial co-ordinates vary with t, then something is subtracted from the change in time co-ordinate.
The way you have phrased things it looks as if the age of the universe is quite arbitrary and frame dependant but it is not like that, we can make a much more objective statement.
For a start there are no global (or universe wide) inertial frames of reference in an expanding universe
I'm sorry but you have trimmed too many corners here and ended up with a statement that is just wrong even in SR.
Time dialtion on its own is not the master of disagreements in what would be said to be happening now or simultaneously across the universe.
Consider a frame S and another frame S' which is a standard Lorentz boost from frame S.
Specifically assume the origin (s, t) = (0,0) in frame S and the origin (s',t') =(0, 0) coincide at time t=0 (or at t'=0 if you prefer) but frame S' just has some velocity v relative to S. Now it does not matter what that velocity v is and hence what the time dilation factor of frame S relative to S' might be, the origins of the two spacetime frames (s, t) = (0, 0) and (s', t') = (0,0) just do coincide. The appropriate Lorentz transformation takes (s,t) = (0,0) in S ----> (s', t') = (0,0) in S'. So that event will lie along a line of simultaneity for "my time = 0" that a person would draw across a spacetime diagram regardless of whether they are at rest w.r.t. frame S or frame S'. To say this another way, both observers agree that the event (0,0) is happening at "my time =0" or what they might call "now".
This is the essence of what is often called "the Andromeda paradox" in SR. It is not the time dilation factor on its own that determines the discrepency in which events in the universe are considered to be happening "now", it is a combination of the time dilation AND ALSO the distance between the two observers that matters.
So, in the case of the Andromeda paradox, a human being on earth can make the invasion force from Andromeda have departed 1 week ago or not having been sent yet just by walking slowly in one direction or the other on planet earth.
Now, as it happens, Andromeda is moving towards the Milky Way.
"The age of the universe" is not arbitrary and changed just by boosting to another frame.
We have a very specific understanding of what is meant by the age of the universe and we can make a powerful and objective statement:
However, we can assert that the maximum proper time that could have elapsed (on the path we have taken) since the big bang event is 13.8 bn years.