Center of the Universe - Is it Possible?

In summary, the balloon analogy is used to explain the 2d universe. Every point expands equally from every point in the 2 dimensions of the balloon. But in the 3 dimensions of space, there is a center where the balloon expanded from. This center does not exist in any of the three dimensions we can comprehend, so it's all a bit moot. If a center could be identified, wouldn't it need to be plotted over time?
  • #36
WhoWee said:
If a center could be identified, wouldn't it need to be plotted over time?


If you want a center to the universe, you can call every point on the spacetime map as the center of the universe, since big bang happened everywhere - but not at any single point.
 
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  • #37
Unless we happen to reside very near the 'center' of the universe, which I consider highly improbale, the CMB would be decidedly non-uniform.
 
  • #38
Chronos said:
Unless we happen to reside very near the 'center' of the universe, which I consider highly improbale, the CMB would be decidedly non-uniform.
What?? Why are you suggesting there's a centre??


Chronos said:
Eternal time is another confounding fallacy, time is irrelevant prior to the big bang. As Einstein noted, time is what clocks measure. No clocks, no time.

What?? So, time did not exist prior to the fifteenth century or so?


Look, I know this is not literally what you meant but you can't go around posting these pithy platitudes without putting them in some context where they are heavily conditioned. Someone, somewhere is going to say "Time did not exist before clocks, and we might be near he centre of the universe. Yes I have a reference, see this Science Advisor on Physics Forums? No more venerable reference than that..."
 
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  • #39
As far as i understand, there is no centre.
 
  • #40
ManyNames said:
If you want a center to the universe, you can call every point on the spacetime map as the center of the universe, since big bang happened everywhere - but not at any single point.

You know, this is what bugs me about the current model. People cite all of it's tenets as fact without regard to relative probability. It is highly likely that everything we see around us was unimaginably dense and compact at one point. Fine. We have evidence that is very hard to interpret any other way. Something went Bang. You bet.

BUT. To state as fact that the Big Bang happened everywhere is a philosophical statement at best. The eviedence is only that it happened everywhere we are likely to be able to see any time soon, which is NOT to say that we even have any idea what "everywhere" amounts to. That the universe has proven to hold more diverse features beyond the contemporary human ability to resolve them at any given time is as likely now as it was a thousand years ago.

A little perspective and a generous helping of phrases like we think, or presumably, or according to the current model would go a long way in helping people establish a little theoretical context around some of the more tenuous aspects of the standard model.

-Mike
 
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  • #41
Cuetek said:
You know, this is what bugs me about the current model. People cite all of it's tenets as fact...

No, they cite it as the theory it is. The theory part is implicit in all discussions.

If people are coming on to a physics board to discuss physics and do not know this, then they are woefully unprepared.
 
  • #42
DaveC426913 said:
What?? Why are you suggesting there's a centre??
I thought I was suggesting IF that were true, the CMB would not be uniform UNLESS we are at the putative center - a possible, but, unlikely explanation.

DaveC426913 said:
What?? So, time did not exist prior to the fifteenth century or so?
I believe you are confusing clocks with mechanical timepieces. Ancient civilizations used the motions of the sun, moon and stars. Motion is the essence of any clock, be it subatomic particles, pendulums, or the stars. Time without motion cannot be quantified, hence is meaningless. I believe that is context Einstein intended with regard to clocks.

DaveC426913 said:
Look, I know this is not literally what you meant but you can't go around posting these pithy platitudes without putting them in some context where they are heavily conditioned. Someone, somewhere is going to say "Time did not exist before clocks, and we might be near he centre of the universe. Yes I have a reference, see this Science Advisor on Physics Forums? No more venerable reference than that..."
I hope this clarification satisfies any perceived contextual needs.
 
  • #43
Cuetek said:
You know, this is what bugs me about the current model. People cite all of it's tenets as fact without regard to relative probability. It is highly likely that everything we see around us was unimaginably dense and compact at one point. Fine. We have evidence that is very hard to interpret any other way. Something went Bang. You bet.

BUT. To state as fact that the Big Bang happened everywhere is a philosophical statement at best. The eviedence is only that it happened everywhere we are likely to be able to see any time soon, which is NOT to say that we even have any idea what "everywhere" amounts to. That the universe has proven to hold more diverse features beyond the contemporary human ability to resolve them at any given time is as likely now as it was a thousand years ago.

A little perspective and a generous helping of phrases like we think, or presumably, or according to the current model would go a long way in helping people establish a little theoretical context around some of the more tenuous aspects of the standard model.

-Mike
Well, Mike, how else can you interpret it? No scientist I know of claims the BB as fact. It is merely our best approximation based on observation and physics. No one disputes our observations are incomplete and theories have error margins. To couch every assertion with 'our best guess is' unnecessarily diverts attention from efforts to propose new ideas. This is the only way to shore up our more fundamental assumptions. If something wrong with the pyramid of current theory, new observations will eventually cause it to collapse under its own weight. Furthermore, no scientist in his right mind would hesitate to attack the slightest inconsistency in any existing theory, however precious it may seem. This is how Nobel's are won.
 
  • #44
DaveC426913 said:
No, they cite it as the theory it is. The theory part is implicit in all discussions. .

The theoretical part is not implicit particularly in Cosmology. All theory includes a great deal of subject matter that is widely corroborated. Such factual components of theory may be factually stated with no ill-effect. However, the parts of theory that are either very low on data, long on inductive reasoning or presumptive of issues extending beyond the available evidence are highly speculative. Presenting such formal conjecture as factual by casual ommision is to perpetuate the weakest part of conventional wisdom as truth. Such casual ommision leads to casual acceptance of exactly the parts of theory most likely to be false.


DaveC426913 said:
If people are coming on to a physics board to discuss physics and do not know this, then they are woefully unprepared.

Words have meaning and to present pesumption as fact behind some ill conceived notion that everyone who's anyone "knows" where the line is drawn is pure arrogance and ultimately an impediment to science.
 
  • #45
Cuetek said:
The theoretical part is not implicit particularly in Cosmology.
Um, you do know that implicit is synonymous with unspoken, right? :wink:

i.e. the theoretical part of all physics is there as a given, it does not need to be spoken every time.

Anyone who is interested in cosmology will have to already understand the theoretical nature of physics (otherwise, as previously stated, they are in over their heads). Would you ask that every discussion of physics should be qualified so that school children or laypeople don't misunderstand the difference between fact and theory?


Cuetek said:
Words have meaning and to present pesumption as fact...
Please show one example where cosmological theory is presented as fact.

And for whom are you speaking? Are you having trouble with the difference between fact and theory? Do you treach a class where all your students have trouble? Is this a genuine problem of which you are aware? Or is this a complaint without substance?
 
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  • #46
So we know that galaxies are moving away from us in accordance to their distance and the Hubble constant... but since all motion is relative, we can't very well say which galaxies are moving away from which; to every other galaxy, their neighboring galaxies are moving away from them similarly. BUT...

Why don't we just take the cosmic background radiation, take its red/blue shift, use that to calculate its speed relative to us (which is hence our speed relative to the greater universe), and then multiply that speed backwards by 18 billion years (or however old the universe is estimated to be currently), and then you have the position we'd be in 18 billion years ago, which would be the center of the universe?
 
  • #47
inhahe said:
So we know that galaxies are moving away from us in accordance to their distance and the Hubble constant... but since all motion is relative, we can't very well say which galaxies are moving away from which; to every other galaxy, their neighboring galaxies are moving away from them similarly. BUT...

Why don't we just take the cosmic background radiation, take its red/blue shift, use that to calculate its speed relative to us (which is hence our speed relative to the greater universe), and then multiply that speed backwards by 18 billion years (or however old the universe is estimated to be currently), and then you have the position we'd be in 18 billion years ago, which would be the center of the universe?

CMBR doesn't work like that as you are still thinking that the universe is 3D. If you did that you'd find we are the centre of the universe (which we know isn't the case). As it's pretty much uniform and ALL redshifting.
 
  • #48
DaveC426913 said:
Um, you do know that implicit is synonymous with unspoken, right? :wink:

It is not implicit in a forum where people have widely varying comprehension of the theories.

DaveC426913 said:
i.e. the theoretical part of all physics is there as a given, it does not need to be spoken every time.

I say, in this forum, it should be. It's not a lot of trouble to add "the math would indicate" or "theory suggests" to passages that are purely speculative like dark energy/dark matter.

DaveC426913 said:
Anyone who is interested in cosmology will have to already understand the theoretical nature of physics (otherwise, as previously stated, they are in over their heads). Would you ask that every discussion of physics should be qualified so that school children or laypeople don't misunderstand the difference between fact and theory?

It occurs to me that this forum is designed to be as much a resource for younger students as it is an exchange for seasoned enthusiasts. Such indignation over my suggestion that clarifying the degree of presumption in modern cosmology might be useful in this forum is hard for me to take very seriously.

DaveC426913 said:
Please show one example where cosmological theory is presented as fact.

Well, the guy I was responding to with my original complait said the following:

"... since big bang happened everywhere - but not at any single point."

Even if true this is unknowable, much less factual.

DaveC426913 said:
And for whom are you speaking?

Myself, thanks.


DaveC426913 said:
Are you having trouble with the difference between fact and theory?

No, I'm the one suggesting we formalize the difference between fact and theory a little more in our conversations.

DaveC426913 said:
Do you treach a class where all your students have trouble? Is[/B] this a genuine problem of which you are aware? Or is this a complaint without substance?

Have you quit beating your wife yet?

-Mike
 
  • #49
Cuetek said:
For whom do you speak.
Myself, thanks.
OK, so you alone are having trouble with the implicity that BB is a theory. For a moment, I thought you were suggesting anyone else was confused by it.

OK well that's easily rectified.

The BB is our best theory. There are no seriously competing theories. It is not fact.

You now know this. Problem solved.
 
  • #50
Chronos said:
Well, Mike, how else can you interpret it? No scientist I know of claims the BB as fact. It is merely our best approximation based on observation and physics. No one disputes our observations are incomplete and theories have error margins.

(snip -placed below-)

If something wrong with the pyramid of current theory, new observations will eventually cause it to collapse under its own weight. Furthermore, no scientist in his right mind would hesitate to attack the slightest inconsistency in any existing theory, however precious it may seem. This is how Nobel's are won.


It's true that nothing will stop the progress of science and sooner or later the data tells the tale. But there is a problem with new data. The CMB and the Super nova recession data are just about the only major new discoveries that have been made recently. And they are both corroborative of there universe having been very compact at some point in the past. So the BB is very attractive and has been for a century or so.

But the weakest part of the BB is not that things were compact some 15 billion years ago, but that everthing in the universe was compact and that there was nothing "outside" or "before" the BB. That is, the cosmological principle (CP) has been take as fact and is considered fact almost reflexively in most exminations of the new data and certainly in all conversations among the experts about the conventional models. But the CP is not only theoretical, it is unlikely.

Coversations about dark matter and dark energy are entirely predicated on the universe being homogeneous. The calculations of the total matter in the universe necessarily require uniformity throughout. And the CP is really an idealization of the locally visible universe and not a careful examination of the most probable disposition of the large scale universe.

All scales of the universe that we have ever examined shows a hierarchical structure, yet we humans always terminate that hierarchy with every new cosmology we devise. Currently the CP terminates the hierarchy by extending the largest visible scale out to whatever extent necessary. The CP is a very handy idealization that allows us to work backwards with all the local material to devise what I imagine to be a very accurate history, but it does not serve us to imagine so rigidly that it is universal. It is unlikely that the CP holds at, say, a million or a billion times the particle horizon.

Every physical phenomenon ever examined has proven to be finite in extent and multiply manifest (that is, for any given physical phenomenon we can find other examples in the universe). Why must the BB be unique. The CP is just as likely to be only a local idealization and if so, discussions about dark matter and dark energy are discussion about what an idealized homogenous universe would look like rather than a universe where larger structures and phenomonon dictated local matter/energy dispositions like they do at all the other scales of the universe we have examined so far.

Chronos said:
To couch every assertion with 'our best guess is' unnecessarily diverts attention from efforts to propose new ideas. This is the only way to shore up our more fundamental assumptions.

I don't see what you mean here. To me, the keeping everyone more apprised of the most presumptive aspects would be the better strategy in that it is probably the more presumptive aspects that will need modifying or replacing. I think that it wouldn't be too imposing for cosmologists, if only when talking to the public or the less cognizant groups, to add phrases like "the math suggests" or "the evidence suggests" or even "according to the model" before passages that deal with subject that are short on data, long on presumption or are projections beyond the existing data (eg dark energy, dark matter, curvature of the universe, etc). It would keep us more mindful of our own presumption.

-Mike
 
  • #51
xxChrisxx said:
As it's pretty much uniform and ALL redshifting.

That's a bold statement, and horribly incorrect.
 
  • #52
Kronos5253 said:
That's a bold statement, and horribly incorrect.

Fantastic response. Care to elaborate?
 
  • #53
xxChrisxx said:
Fantastic response. Care to elaborate?

What is the Andromeda galaxy's shift color?
 
  • #54
To know the center, we would have to know how the universe started(which we don't know). Please don't resort to the big bang theory model, it may not be right. Plus we only know of the 4 of 11 dimensions of space(if there proves to be 11), so jumping to conclusions is not something we can do given our tiny knowledge of the universe.
 
  • #55
xxChrisxx said:
Fantastic response. Care to elaborate?
OK, technically it's incorrect, but in spirit it's correct.

There are some nearby galaxies that are blue-shifted due their to inherent relative velocities.

It's kind of like saying the steep hill you're driving down is not entirely downhill; the road itself is quite uneven so there are a few places right near the beginning where the unevenness results in a very localized uphill slope.

Is it accurate to say the hill is only mostly downhill?
 
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  • #56
Very good stuff guys.
But it started from a singularity.Which is a single point .Hence a center.
Of course the singularity is nothing but the most Super Massive Black Hole there ever was.
 
  • #57
RWHITE said:
Very good stuff guys.
But it started from a singularity.Which is a single point .Hence a center.

No, a singularity is not necessarily a single point. A singularity is usually more like an edge. In the case of standard cosmological models, this "edge" is located in all directions.
RWHITE said:
Of course the singularity is nothing but the most Super Massive Black Hole there ever was.

No, the cosmological singularity is not a supermassive black hole.
 
  • #58
But it started from a singularity.Which is a single point .Hence a center.
Nope.
A singularity is not within the manifold. Hence not an event.
You say "point". A point has a location, and persists through time. It is one-dimensional (extended in time direction), like a line.
But if the singularity were removeable (like in Milne's Model), it would not be a point. It would be an event. Events are a point in space at a certain moment in time. After that moment, there may be an infinity of "points" that all contain this "big bang event". They all have been at the "center".
 
  • #59
RWHITE said:
Very good stuff guys.
But it started from a singularity.Which is a single point .Hence a center.
Of course the singularity is nothing but the most Super Massive Black Hole there ever was.

No one knows what a singularity is in the real world. We only have a mathematical model of a singularity in terms of two sets of very theoretical phenomenon. One is the black hole, and what actually abides at its "center" is unknown. The other is the Big Bang and what it might have constituted its origin is even less certain. We have mathematical models that presume all manner of outlandish properties in order to make them viable systems withing our mathematical capabilities. But no one can tell you with confidence what a singularity is in the real world.

But perhaps more importantly, you presumption that "it all" started with what was at the origin of the part of the expanding profile we can see is a presumption that is equally unfounded. Men like to think that everything they happen to be able to see is sufficient to describe the universe. Since it never has been the case, I can confidently say that it is unlikely to be so now. The Big Bang is a little pop among countless billions, just like every other physical phenomenon you can identify.

All material phenomenon are finite and multiply manifest. You can find the end of every phenomenon and another example of it somewhere else. We look at the largest phenomenon and idiotically say that's everything. We cling to our localized mythologies again and again, only to find more universe again and again. The stuff is all finite. The context is infinite. That's what the evidence shows most clearly.

-Cuetek (Cling away.)
 
  • #60
Kronos5253 said:
What is the Andromeda galaxy's shift color?

I can't believe I didn't read this earlier.

Oh come on, that's just being picky. You KNOW why Andromeda is blueshifting. Becuase the gravitational attraction with the Milky Way is pulling us together. It was obvious to all that I was referring to Cosmological Redshift. Andromeda certainly isn't moving towards us because that bit of spacetime is 'expanding in the wrong direction'. This was a thread about the centre of the universe and expansion.

Dave's analogy is good for this. You'd never say that due to a highly localised upwards gradient that it wasn't downhill.
 
  • #61
6882840305_44bee68d38.jpg


I have two arrows on this screenshot... One (on top) points to somewhere around where Earth is... The second, points to a giant bright glowing center of our universe (at least, I think it is our universe - is there something bigger than our universe but smaller than "everything"?). What is the giant glowing thing... Of course, you could argue that SOMEONE created this 3d depiction of our universe, so maybe they are wrong... But I have seen this same concept in several different depictions, so there has to be some logic behind the giant glowing light... Can anyone answer?
 
  • #62
Actually, by definition, the universe IS everything. I know there's a new popular movement about the "multi-verse", but that's ultimately semantics. The "universe" is intended to describe everything that is.

What you appear to have a picture of is not the universe, but a galaxy. There are a gajillion galaxies in the universe. I'm not sure that the giant glow in the center of galaxies has an official name, but I'm sure someone on here can answer for you if it does. The "glowing" is due to a greater clustering of stars and space dust, which both emit and reflect a great amount of light.

I hope that helps!
 
  • #63
seanm, yes as Hoku points out, what you have there is not a picture of the universe, but a picture of a galaxy, specifically a spiral galaxy. Our galaxy is called the Milky Way, and it is but one of billions in the universe. There's another one nearby, called Andromeda, about 2 million light years away.

The central area in a spiral galaxy is called by many names - most often the core or the central bulge. It's a dense packing of millions and millions of stars.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galaxy
 
<h2>1. What is the center of the universe?</h2><p>The center of the universe refers to the point in space from which all matter and energy in the universe is believed to originate.</p><h2>2. Is it possible to determine the exact location of the center of the universe?</h2><p>No, it is not possible to determine the exact location of the center of the universe. The universe is constantly expanding and there is no fixed point that can be identified as the center.</p><h2>3. Can we observe the center of the universe?</h2><p>No, we cannot observe the center of the universe. The light from the most distant objects in the universe has not yet reached us, making it impossible to see the true center.</p><h2>4. Is the concept of a center of the universe supported by scientific evidence?</h2><p>No, the concept of a center of the universe is not supported by scientific evidence. The universe is believed to be homogeneous and isotropic, meaning that there is no preferred point or direction.</p><h2>5. Are there any theories or hypotheses about the center of the universe?</h2><p>There are various theories and hypotheses about the center of the universe, but none have been proven. Some propose that there may be multiple centers or that the universe has no center at all.</p>

1. What is the center of the universe?

The center of the universe refers to the point in space from which all matter and energy in the universe is believed to originate.

2. Is it possible to determine the exact location of the center of the universe?

No, it is not possible to determine the exact location of the center of the universe. The universe is constantly expanding and there is no fixed point that can be identified as the center.

3. Can we observe the center of the universe?

No, we cannot observe the center of the universe. The light from the most distant objects in the universe has not yet reached us, making it impossible to see the true center.

4. Is the concept of a center of the universe supported by scientific evidence?

No, the concept of a center of the universe is not supported by scientific evidence. The universe is believed to be homogeneous and isotropic, meaning that there is no preferred point or direction.

5. Are there any theories or hypotheses about the center of the universe?

There are various theories and hypotheses about the center of the universe, but none have been proven. Some propose that there may be multiple centers or that the universe has no center at all.

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