Where is the center of the universe?

In summary, the center of the beginning of inflation is not located, and looking in the right direction would require looking towards the center of the universe, which is impossible due to the expansion of the universe.
  • #106
If you follow Einstein's logic you have to consider the universe as 4 dimensional and treat all dimensions on an equal footing. So if you ask for the center of the universe you have to ask what is the center of time. This only makes sense from Feynman's perspective if you say matter moves in forward time and antimatter in reverse time. So it seems the center of time is at t=0, the big bang, where apparently spacetime originated. This would also represent the catastrophic end of antimatter, at least from its perspective, when it all converged on a single point. Since that time antimatter has been retreating back to its past, at least from our perspective. Strange.
 
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  • #107
ynot1 said:
This only makes sense from Feynman's perspective if you say matter moves in forward time and antimatter in reverse time. So it seems the center of time is at t=0, the big bang, where apparently spacetime originated. This would also represent the catastrophic end of antimatter, at least from its perspective, when it all converged on a single point. Since that time antimatter has been retreating back to its past, at least from our perspective. Strange.
Antimatter does not move backward in time. The above statements are all incorrect.
 
  • #108
DaveC426913 said:
Antimatter does not move backward in time. The above statements are all incorrect.

Isn't the middle bold statement only half incorrect? It may not have occurred at t=0, but it did happen.
 
  • #109
salvestrom said:
Isn't the middle bold statement only half incorrect? It may not have occurred at t=0, but it did happen.

What? That antimatter came to an end at t=0? No.

You mean why there is such a paucity of it in the universe today? Fair enough.
 
  • #110
DaveC426913 said:
What? That antimatter came to an end at t=0? No.

You mean why there is such a paucity of it in the universe today? Fair enough.

My statement was pretty clear that it didnt happen at t=0. Yes, I was referring to the fact it is supposed to have happened at some point after, leading to it being largely absent from today's universe.
 
  • #112
salvestrom said:
My statement was pretty clear that it didnt happen at t=0. Yes, I was referring to the fact it is supposed to have happened at some point after, leading to it being largely absent from today's universe.
ynot1's comments were clearly about moving backward in time toward the Big Bang. Which is completely wrong.
 
  • #113
salvestrom said:
My statement was pretty clear that it didnt happen at t=0. Yes, I was referring to the fact it is supposed to have happened at some point after, leading to it being largely absent from today's universe.
Largely absent? If antimatter ended t=0 we are now seeing it before it ended. Antimatter is now backing away from gravitational fields as it is traveling in backwards time. That means as matter separates antimatter backs off even faster because of its antigravitational effects. So it seems if it's out there it's way out there. And the more of it that moves away it could be the faster the universe appears to expand. A possibility for the accelerating expansion. I realize it is difficult to think backwards in time.
 
  • #114
DaveC426913 said:
ynot1's comments were clearly about moving backward in time toward the Big Bang. Which is completely wrong.

Which I understand. But you highlighted "the catastrophic end of antimatter" and finished by stating all the above comments are incorrect. I was only looking to point out that the matter-antimatter annihilation had occured, only not when proposed by the poster. Someone else reading this might have been unaware of this.
 
  • #115
ynot1 said:
Largely absent? If antimatter ended t=0 we are now seeing it before it ended. Antimatter is now backing away from gravitational fields as it is traveling in backwards time. That means as matter separates antimatter backs off even faster because of its antigravitational effects. So it seems if it's out there it's way out there. And the more of it that moves away it could be the faster the universe appears to expand. A possibility for the accelerating expansion. I realize it is difficult to think backwards in time.

Well I have to admit that I don't follow, but as matter and antimatter annihilate - wouldn't then this theory imply, that somewhere between big bang and end of time there will be "great annihilation"?
 
  • #116
ynot1 said:
Largely absent? If antimatter ended t=0 we are now seeing it before it ended. Antimatter is now backing away from gravitational fields as it is traveling in backwards time. That means as matter separates antimatter backs off even faster because of its antigravitational effects. So it seems if it's out there it's way out there. And the more of it that moves away it could be the faster the universe appears to expand. A possibility for the accelerating expansion. I realize it is difficult to think backwards in time.

Anti-matter was largely wiped out after t=0. I have never heard anyone suggestthat antiparticles are time-reversed before.

Has anyone else viewed ynot's link? I can't tell what's actual physics, what's being hijacked and what's getting made up.

Edit: in fact, the quote he gives along with the link is presented as if Feynman proposed it. I find that unlikely.
 
  • #117
salvestrom said:
Anti-matter was largely wiped out after t=0. I have never heard anyone suggestthat antiparticles are time-reversed before.

Has anyone else viewed ynot's link? I can't tell what's actual physics, what's being hijacked and what's getting made up.

Edit: in fact, the quote he gives along with the link is presented as if Feynman proposed it. I find that unlikely.
Actually it might have been someone else as discussed at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retrocausality:
"Feynman, and earlier Stueckelberg, proposed an interpretation of the positron as an electron moving backward in time,[15]"
 
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  • #118
ynot1 said:
"An electron traveling backwards in time is what we call a positron."

Sorry, that's not the case. This was proposed by Feynman in 1948, and falsified by Christiansen, Cronin, Fitch and Turlay in 1964. For some reason, this idea Will Not Die, despite having been known to be wrong for almost half a century.
 
  • #119
Vanadium 50 said:
Sorry, that's not the case. This was proposed by Feynman in 1948, and falsified by Christiansen, Cronin, Fitch and Turlay in 1964. For some reason, this idea Will Not Die, despite having been known to be wrong for almost half a century.

Interesting. We haven't discussed this topic in any of my university classes yet, but I have heard this (apparently false) statement in the popular science regions many times over. I was just wondering, is the idea of their disproving easy to understand? Or where can I read up on this?
 
  • #120
mr. vodka said:
Interesting. We haven't discussed this topic in any of my university classes yet, but I have heard this (apparently false) statement in the popular science regions many times over. I was just wondering, is the idea of their disproving easy to understand? Or where can I read up on this?

Hmm. Reading thru the wikipedia page on antimatter the most straightforward disproof of them traveling backward in time is that scientist create billions of them these days and we can see them. I'm pretty sure you're not supposed to be able to see something moving backward in time (a trait attached to tachyons).
 
  • #121
salvestrom said:
Hmm. Reading thru the wikipedia page on antimatter the most straightforward disproof of them traveling backward in time is that scientist create billions of them these days and we can see them. I'm pretty sure you're not supposed to be able to see something moving backward in time (a trait attached to tachyons).
Stranger yet. I remember a Feynman video where he was waving his hands around illustrating positrons going around in a synchrotron, I think it was, in the reverse direction of an electron. It seems there is no "arrow of time", rather "arrows" of time. That is we view time going in both directions. In our case apparently the arrows are pointing inward - forward for us, backwards for antimatter. I certainly wouldn't make any claims about faster than light particles however.

From the Einstein point of view all 4 dimensions should be treated on an equal footing. So from our perspective there is always an up, down, left, right, forward, and backward. If time is to be treated equivalently there must also be a forward and backwards. Actually it's a matter of symmetry - in all 4 dimensions.
 
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  • #122
ynot1 said:
Stranger yet. I remember a Feynman video where he was waving his hands around illustrating positrons going around in a synchrotron, I think it was, in the reverse direction of an electron. It seems there is no "arrow of time", rather "arrows" of time. That is we view time going in both directions. In our case apparently the arrows are pointing inward - forward for us, backwards for antimatter. I certainly wouldn't make any claims about faster than light particles however.

From the Einstein point of view all 4 dimensions should be treated on an equal footing. So from our perspective there is always an up, down, left, right, forward, and backward. If time is to be treated equivalently there must also be a forward and backwards. Actually it's a matter of symmetry - in all 4 dimensions.

Time has a forward and back. We, and the universe, have been moving through that dimension from its apparent origin at t=0 up until the present date, from which we will move on. The uniqueness of the time dimension is the apparent inability to move backwards along it. However, that "back" has been traveled along nonetheless as our past. I have watched a 1950's/60's lecture of Feynman entirely dedicated to explaining the arrow of time and entropy. He never mentioned anything about antimatter and traveling back through time.

Since the universe encompasses all space and all time, it could be argued from a universal perspective all 4 dimensions have been traveled and explored equally. There would then be no requirement that any substructure of it, ourselves or antimatter, need be able to travel back in time in order to treat the 4 dimensions equally.
 
  • #123
Anti-time, like anti-gravity probably is probably unphysical. Gravity is an integer spin force, which does not have an anti equivalent. A photon is also an integer spin force and has no anti equivalent. Only half spin entities, like matter, have an anti equivalent so far as we know. If there is such a thing as a 'chronon' it almost surely is an integer spin force.
 
  • #124
Chronos said:
Anti-time, like anti-gravity probably is probably unphysical. Gravity is an integer spin force, which does not have an anti equivalent. A photon is also an integer spin force and has no anti equivalent. Only half spin entities, like matter, have an anti equivalent so far as we know. If there is such a thing as a 'chronon' it almost surely is an integer spin force.
I thought the photon is its own anti-particle.
 
  • #125
salvestrom said:
Time has a forward and back. We, and the universe, have been moving through that dimension from its apparent origin at t=0 up until the present date, from which we will move on. The uniqueness of the time dimension is the apparent inability to move backwards along it. However, that "back" has been traveled along nonetheless as our past. I have watched a 1950's/60's lecture of Feynman entirely dedicated to explaining the arrow of time and entropy. He never mentioned anything about antimatter and traveling back through time.

Since the universe encompasses all space and all time, it could be argued from a universal perspective all 4 dimensions have been traveled and explored equally. There would then be no requirement that any substructure of it, ourselves or antimatter, need be able to travel back in time in order to treat the 4 dimensions equally.
Interesting. Does all time include the future?
 
  • #126
ynot1 said:
Interesting. Does all time include the future?

This is a question of view point. Is the universe entirely determinstic or random?
 
  • #127
salvestrom said:
This is a question of view point. Is the universe entirely determinstic or random?

I believe that the universe is deterministic . If you apply quantum mechanics on the universe then you can consider the universe as a wavefunction whose evolution is of course deterministic (As the equation of motion is A partial differential equation ) .
 
  • #128
In string theory , If you put a brane in spacetime then this brane breaks spacetime rotational and translational invariance so there should be preferred directions in spacetime also if you imagine a universe with concentric D-branes then there should be a center of the universe . Is this correct?
 
  • #129
scottbekerham said:
I believe that the universe is deterministic . If you apply quantum mechanics on the universe then you can consider the universe as a wavefunction whose evolution is of course deterministic (As the equation of motion is A partial differential equation ) .
Yes I believe our ultimate fate has been determined at least until the universe is reborn in the next big bang.
 
  • #130
russ_watters said:
Incorrect: it is expanding at the same rate everywhere.
Implying the accelerated expansion is the same everywhere. Interesting.
 
  • #131
seto6 said:
think space as a balloon. before "big bang" think if the balloon has no air then blow it up then find the center...you can't find the center. if it has cent it would contradict infinite universe
Is there a problem with this contradiction?
 
  • #132
Lok said:
Because the overall density of the whole bigbang matter is thinning, and a relativistic view of this means time is accelerating and space is expanding. It is a twofold thing that results in acelerated expansion.
Note from a Newtonian view if the overall matter density is thinning and the force of expansion is constant then the expansion must be accelerating.
 
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  • #133
Fredrik said:
Because matter is distributed approximately the same everywhere. This is actually only true on large scales, but the same can also be said about the expansion. The solar system and the galaxy isn't expanding, at least not at the same rate as the cosmological expansion.
Yes gravitationally bound objects like galaxies aren't expanding as I understand it. Rather they are collapsing and forming stars, planets, black holes, etc. Their ultimate fate is recycling by black holes into radiation.
 
  • #134
Greylorn said:
The paint balloon analogy does not seem to fit. When the balloon hits the ground, it is subject to asymmetrical forces. The bottom will likely break while the top is intact. The paint will be emerging from a non-spherical container which flexes in process. Shards of rubber block the flow of paint.

A more approximate analogy might be a perfect sphere of paint sitting in deep space, with a tiny symmetrical explosive charge placed at its center that releases its energy in about 10exp-40 second. I suspect that this would produce an evenly distributed pattern of paint.

As for the WMAP images, I've looked at them again and again and keep wondering why astrophysicists insist that they show a symmetrical energy distribution. There are blobs and lumps all over the place. I make it a point to keep in practice recognizing such things by studying a centerfold image monthly. Haven't lost my skills. The WMAP images look to me like the result of a sloppy, asymmetrical paint balloon explosion.

Thanks for your reply. Please don't worry about sharing your thoughts with me. I don't treat PF like a physics class where the answers are in the professor's private supplementary text. The PF is a place where awesome ideas could be formed if people share their honest thoughts and best ideas, post interesting questions and expect a variety of answers.
These astrophysicists are only aboit 99.9% correct. If the distribution were perfectly symmectric it wouldn't be possible for particles to aggregate and form galaxies. The variability would be due to quantum uncertainty. Since this is very small you could guesstimate the size of the original volume as about 1000 Planck volumes.
 
  • #135
Greylorn said:
Me too! I suspect that your style of humor will generally be lost on those who take themselves seriously.



I find the method by which we've derived BB theory fully plausible. But, where it gets us does not feel right. I don't mean feeling in the emotional sense, but in the logical sense.
It seems to me that if we got there from here, we should be able to get here from there. That does not appear to be the case. This makes BB theory logically asymmetrical.

Then there is the persistent observation that we live in a cause-effect universe; where then is the Big Bang's cause?

50 years ago I gave up my belief in God for several reasons, one in particular being the absurd motivations attributed to this entity for the creation of mankind. BB theory seems to me to suffer from the equivalent failing--- lack of plausible cause.



Wherever we start can be fairly regarded as an hypothesis. Whether an hypothesis becomes the core of effective physical understanding, or the basic dogma of another religion, depends upon what we do with it.

If we can derive it mathematically from a bit of observational evidence, and test it empirically, then it's usually science. If it predicts something we'd otherwise not have known, then it is almost certainly science.

But if we insist that an hypothesis came inscribed on golden tablets, since removed to heaven, and cannot possibly test it, then it's religion.

If we wake up some morning suddenly knowing the secrets pf the universe, and wrap a bunch of coherent polysyllabic words around our notions but never bother to test any assumptions or trouble ourselves with predictions, we've got another philosophy.

IMO BB theory is in the neverland of what I'd call, physical theology. While derived by scientists, it lacks some properties which we normally associate with sound science. Moreover, the Big Bang's mysterious precursor shares more characteristics with the God of Christianity than with any known physical phenomenon. (Mysterious or non-existent origin, containing/creating all matter and energy, yet doing so without credible cause or purpose.)

Something's not right with BB theory.
Likely the credible cause is quantum uncertainty. Nothingness is a state of certainty and disallowed by quantum uncertainty. As to how the laws of nature came about, that would be the real question in my mind.
 
  • #136
scottbekerham said:
I believe that the universe is deterministic . If you apply quantum mechanics on the universe then you can consider the universe as a wavefunction whose evolution is of course deterministic (As the equation of motion is A partial differential equation ) .
Certainly the wavefunction is deterministic. But its magnitude describes a probability.
 
  • #137
Greylorn Re:
Wherever we start can be fairly regarded as an hypothesis. Whether an hypothesis becomes the core of effective physical understanding, or the basic dogma of another religion, depends upon what we do with it.

If we can derive it mathematically from a bit of observational evidence, and test it empirically, then it's usually science. If it predicts something we'd otherwise not have known, then it is almost certainly science.

But if we insist that an hypothesis came inscribed on golden tablets, since removed to heaven, and cannot possibly test it, then it's religion.

If we wake up some morning suddenly knowing the secrets pf the universe, and wrap a bunch of coherent polysyllabic words around our notions but never bother to test any assumptions or trouble ourselves with predictions, we've got another philosophy.

IMO BB theory is in the neverland of what I'd call, physical theology. While derived by scientists, it lacks some properties which we normally associate with sound science. Moreover, the Big Bang's mysterious precursor shares more characteristics with the God of Christianity than with any known physical phenomenon. (Mysterious or non-existent origin, containing/creating all matter and energy, yet doing so without credible cause or purpose.)

Something's not right with BB theory.

I have had similar misgivings, perhaps because the BB theory isn't even complete yet? Also there is always going to be one more level of cause and effect. e.g. what caused the Branes that caused the BB? etc. Saying that however, it is still good to learn as much as possible about each of these steps regardless.

I have also had similar problems with near infinite universe size then, as well as near infinite universe size now, and yet the creation event is supposed to be a quantum event which I associate with things so small that their position and momentum can't even be accurately determined. I very much suspect I need to learn a lot more about this.

Cosmologists are trying to explain the observations that have been made and then they extrapolate as far back as they can from these observations. The further they extrapolate the more speculative they become, and we could perhaps sometimes do with more information from them regarding just how speculative they are being.


As to how the laws of nature came about, that would be the real question in my mind.
Yes, that's one of them. As for why, well perhaps "The Truman show" helps answer that? :)
Heaven for a Cosmologist, me included, would likely be a place where they could learn the answers to all these questions.
 
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  • #138
Greylorn said:
But if we insist that an hypothesis came inscribed on golden tablets, since removed to heaven, and cannot possibly test it, then it's religion.
Interesting in my view the turning point in man's evolution may be the sun god - the corona. Four footed creatures, when the skies turned dark, probably thought it was time for a nap. But some bipeds looked up and saw the corona and the only way they could interpret it was as a sun god. This earth-moon-sun geometry may be essential for the evolution of man. If the geometry was off by maybe 3% the bipeds may have never bothered to lookup and begin to wonder. And so now we build telescopes and still wonder. Point being science may owe it all to some form of mystery.
 
  • #139
ynot1 said:
Interesting in my view the turning point in man's evolution may be the sun god - the corona. Four footed creatures, when the skies turned dark, probably thought it was time for a nap. But some bipeds looked up and saw the corona and the only way they could interpret it was as a sun god. This earth-moon-sun geometry may be essential for the evolution of man. If the geometry was off by maybe 3% the bipeds may have never bothered to lookup and begin to wonder. And so now we build telescopes and still wonder. Point being science may owe it all to some form of mystery.

Unlikely. Solar eclipses are so rare for any spot on the surface and the Sun itself is so important to everyday life that it is much more likely that a Sun God was made just out of a need to try to explain what the Sun was. In any case science is 100% about finding out the "mystery" of the universe and explaining it using the scientific method.
 
  • #140
Drakkith said:
Unlikely. Solar eclipses are so rare for any spot on the surface and the Sun itself is so important to everyday life that it is much more likely that a Sun God was made just out of a need to try to explain what the Sun was. In any case science is 100% about finding out the "mystery" of the universe and explaining it using the scientific method.
Could be but note rarity is an essential part of the mystery. It separates the believers from the unbelievers. Nobody is really surprised when the sun comes up in the morning.
 

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