What happens when a ray of light hits the boundary of the universe?

In summary: This is just my personal opinion and is not meant to ridicule science, or anyone who studies it. I am simply not a scientist of that nature:smile:
  • #1
Werg22
1,431
1
I am not sure if the universe ever expanded at speed inferior to that of light, but if it did, I am curious to know what would have happened (if it didn't happen) if a light ray (or any electromagnetic wave that is) had hit the boundary of the universe?
 
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  • #2
Present theories of the universe all describe a universe without any boundary.
 
  • #3
Then what is expansion? Is it merely the increase in distances between galaxies into emptiness, emptiness itself having no boundary? So the term "universe" only means the area of emptiness containing all known matter and energy?
 
  • #4
... Is it just me or does this topic have to be explained every 3 days? Think about the balloon analogy, lots of dots on a balloon represent the galaxies. As they balloon expands, the distance between them increases. A light ray will travel along the surface of the balloon and hence there is no boundary.
 
  • #5
Oh, I see, thanks.
 
  • #6
Hi
As Hubble explained that when a balloon having dots is blown than the distance between the dots increase and it increases more for those dots which are relatively far from each other.Now the universe has no boundary it is not that you will come to an edge and than you will fall off. Also now i have a weird idea that the universe epands at the speed of light:smile:
 
  • #7
the universe expands faster than the speed of light
 
  • #8
OSalcido said:
the universe expands faster than the speed of light

Hi
you are wrong for nothing exceeds the speed of light. You might be saying the above for the only reason that you might have a read an article saying that some experiments of NASA show that universe has expanded on all the sides by a great rate and they also think that the expansion of the universe on such a large scale is only possible if they travel at a speed even greater than light
I have come trough various such articles, but its not proved so you can't boast on it.
 
  • #9
Milind_shyani said:
Hi
you are wrong for nothing exceeds the speed of light. You might be saying the above for the only reason that you might have a read an article saying that some experiments of NASA show that universe has expanded on all the sides by a great rate and they also think that the expansion of the universe on such a large scale is only possible if they travel at a speed even greater than light
I have come trough various such articles, but its not proved so you can't boast on it.

No. The expansion of the universe is the expansion of spacetime itself. That can expand faster than light (in fact it does, especially in the inflation phase) We are talking about the geometry here. When we say nothing exceeds the speed of light, we are talking about object cannot be accelerated pass the speed of light. These are different notions.
 
  • #10
IF the "universe" IS expanding, ... what could it be expanding into?
I gave up on trying to figure this out, as I always come to the conclusion that there must be something beyond in order for something to be expanding. A balloon expands into the air around it ... , but if you blow it up too much, what will happen?
I believe in infinity. I know it is a "cop-out", but it works for me. I spent way too much time thinking about these things. I try to stick to things that pertain to reality, the things around me that I have to deal with every day. My environment is much more interesting.
Even if it is expanding, there is nothing we would be able to do about it, or any consequences thereof.
This is just my personal opinion and is not meant to ridicule science, or anyone who studies it. I am simply not a scientist of that nature:smile:
I can't grasp the expansion theory.:frown:
 
  • #11
As Hubble explained that when a balloon having dots is blown than the distance between the dots increase and it increases more for those dots which are relatively far from each other.

However, the balloon analogy implies that the universe folds back on itself. As far as I know, it does not.
 
  • #12
Milind_shyani said:
Hi
you are wrong for nothing exceeds the speed of light. You might be saying the above for the only reason that you might have a read an article saying that some experiments of NASA show that universe has expanded on all the sides by a great rate and they also think that the expansion of the universe on such a large scale is only possible if they travel at a speed even greater than light
I have come trough various such articles, but its not proved so you can't boast on it.

This thread-- superluminal recession speed is common --may help you understand further.
 
  • #13
youfourian said:
IF the "universe" IS expanding, ... what could it be expanding into?

This question probably comes about because you are thinking too much of the "balloon universe." Remember that this is an analogy, and so shouldn't be taken as wholly true.

Note that the word "universe" is taken to mean everything that exists; matter, energy, space and time. Therefore, there can be nothing outside it, and nothing for it to expand into. So we see that, in our three dimensions, the universe is not expanding into anything.

Of course, we could be embedded in a fourth space dimension into which the universe expands (like in the example of the 2D balloon expanding in 3D space). However, this would mean nothing to us, and there would be no way for us to observe this, and so we cannot say whether this is true or not. (cf. the "standard" discussion of small people living on the surface of the balloon. They only know of the two spatial dimensions in which they live, and therefore do not know where they are expanding to. However, to a human living in the 3D embedding space, we see that they are expanding in the third dimension).
 
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  • #14
What is exactly meant by expansion of universe?
The empty space increases so the distance between galaxies increase; I understand it. The matters do not expand, I hope.
 
  • #15
Ahmed Abdullah said:
The matters do not expand, I hope.
No; spacetime expands, and thus the "distance" between every event in spacetime increases. This is another problem with the balloon model, since if one draws dots on a balloon, then inflates it, the dots will increase in size. However, this does not happen in the actual universe. It is better to represent matter in this thought-model of the balloon as, say, small discs of paper stuck onto the balloon which will not expand when the balloon is inflated.
 
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  • #16
natski said:
... Is it just me or does this topic have to be explained every 3 days? Think about the balloon analogy, lots of dots on a balloon represent the galaxies. As they balloon expands, the distance between them increases. A light ray will travel along the surface of the balloon and hence there is no boundary.

Of course this needs to be explained every 3 days. It makes no sense, and has no analogy in life. Even your balloon example fails, because the balloon is expanding into the room you are in. The problem with the question of what is the Universe expanding into is that it is a nonsense question. By definition the universe is everything, so if it is expanding into something, then that something is part of the Universe.

The ESA's new probe Plank hopes to show if the universe is open or closed.

CraigD, AMInstP
www.cymek.com
 
  • #17
I still cannot come to terms with the universe having boundaries because if there are boundaries, there has to be something else beyond them. I also cannot grasp the concept of nothingness. There could never have been nothing, and there will never be nothing. There has always been, and will always be something. Something cannot be made out of nothing in a physical environment of any kind and this is a physical environment.
We are just complex organisms who live our lives and co-exist with other organisms on a planet that is capable of supporting this phenomenon. We have an end, and everything that we are exposed to in our environment has an end so we are trained to think that everything, including the universe has an end. We figured out how to measure things and we think that everything must be measurable. Infinity cannot be measured, so we do not believe it, so we try to figure out ways to measure something that simply cannot be measured. We can build all the little gadgets in the world to try and we can search the depths of space forever, but I don't believe that we will ever find an end to time and space. The only end is our own.
I don't believe there was a beginning, nor will there be an end of the "universe". Time and space are infinite. We are simply here for a very short period of time and we take up a very small amount of space. There was something before our solar system and there will always be something after it is gone. We are not the center of the universe, nor will we ever find one, because there simply cannot be one. Nor can there be any outer boundary. We should stop wasting time and energy on this and concentrate our efforts on solving more important problems that we have here in our own environment. A great mind can be wasted on trying to figure out impossible problems when it could be used to better what we do have control over, and that is doing things to make a difference here at home.
After all, IF there is any boundary, what would we do if we did find it?
What would be beyond it?
 
  • #18
youfourian said:
I still cannot come to terms with the universe having boundaries because if there are boundaries, there has to be something else beyond them.
The second post in the thread very clearly (and correctly) stated that the current theory holds that there is no boundry.

The surface of a balloon works fine here too because the surface has no 2d boundary. It is impossible, however, to visualize a boundless 3d space, so you're probably better off not trying.
I also cannot grasp the concept of nothingness. There could never have been nothing, and there will never be nothing. There has always been, and will always be something. Something cannot be made out of nothing in a physical environment of any kind and this is a physical environment.
Empty space is not "nothingness", it is empty space - and there isn't any of that "outside" the universe either, since there is no "outside". You can travel as far and as fast as you want, but you'll never get to an area where space looks much different from right where we are now.
 
  • #19
youfourian said:
I don't believe there was a beginning, nor will there be an end of the "universe". Time and space are infinite.

We should stop wasting time and energy on this and concentrate our efforts on solving more important problems that we have here in our own environment.

As for the first part, I too believed that all my life up until a few weeks ago when I came here to try and figure out why cosmologists believe what they do. In the process of trying to educate myself in these matters, I realized how full I was of misconceptions and ignorance about the whole concept (and still am, but working on it).

As far as the 2nd part, one must wonder why you wasted your time writing that post?
 
  • #20
russ_watters said:
You can travel as far and as fast as you want, but you'll never get to an area where space looks much different from right where we are now.

What if one could get to the actual edge? What would they see?
Assuming you could separate yourself from the expansion, wouldn't you see nothing to the back of you and a bunch a blueshifted galaxies coming at you? Or if something is coming at you at greater than light speed, would you not be able to see it until it was past you?
 
  • #21
natski said:
... Is it just me or does this topic have to be explained every 3 days?

These forums are "physics and math help" are they not?
 
  • #22
BoomBoom said:
What if one could get to the actual edge? What would they see?
I thought we'd established that there was no boundary to the universe-- i.e. the "edge" does not exist?!
 
  • #23
BoomBoom said:
What if one could get to the actual edge? What would they see?
I'm not sure how many other ways to say it: There is no boundary = There is no edge.
 
  • #24
yenchin said:
No. The expansion of the universe is the expansion of spacetime itself. That can expand faster than light (in fact it does, especially in the inflation phase) We are talking about the geometry here. When we say nothing exceeds the speed of light, we are talking about object cannot be accelerated pass the speed of light. These are different notions.

When you talk about spacetime expansion, can you describe it more clearly:smile:
 
  • #25
Milind says:
When you talk about spacetime expansion, can you describe it more clearly

If the distance between two points in 3D space is expressed in terms of a line element

[tex]ds^2 = adx^2 + bdy^2 + cdz^2[/tex]

then if a,b or c are increasing functions of time, the space is expanding.
 
  • #26
Mentz114 said:
Milind says:


If the distance between two points in 3D space is expressed in terms of a line element

[tex]ds^2 = adx^2 + bdy^2 + cdz^2[/tex]

then if a,b or c are increasing functions of time, the space is expanding.

Hi
Please forgive me if i am wrong but i think this equation tells us that greater the displacement of an object in space coordinates the lesser its displacement in time coordinates eg: If an object moves at a velocity close to light than time will move slowly for that object.
 
  • #27
i think this equation tells us that greater the displacement of an object in space coordinates the lesser its displacement in time coordinates
No it does not. There is no time co-ordinate in that line element. I notice that some posters talk about space-time expanding, but in the FLRW metric the only the spatial part expands.

If an object moves at a velocity close to light than time will move slowly for that object
Only when observed from another inertial frame.
 
  • #28
BoomBoom said:
As far as the 2nd part, one must wonder why you wasted your time writing that post?

I was just curiously browsing threads, waiting to no avail, to see if anyone would reply to mine and this peaked my interest enough to state my opinion on the subject. I thought when nobody replied to my post that I may be in the wrong place so I decided to browse around to see where I was. My apologies for stumbling into the wrong forum and asking questions before getting to know everyone. I guess I just like to waste time:redface:
 
  • #29
youfourian said:
IF the "universe" IS expanding, ... what could it be expanding into?:

Hi
I personly believe that our Universe is expanding in a much much much much bigger and older Universe. That would mean there would be no boundry in a infinit chain of "Universes"
 
  • #30
lionell said:
Hi
I personly believe that our Universe is expanding in a much much much much bigger and older Universe. That would mean there would be no boundry in a infinit chain of "Universes"

This doesn't make any sense to me. Do you have any links which you can provide us with, have you read this in any books, or is this wild speculation?
 
  • #31
The concept of universe being a totality, and the speed of light being the fastest are old. They may be absolute, but I have a hard time believing anything is absolute. 'Always' and 'never' are foolish words. We base our beliefs upon the measurements of instruments, which were created by the minds of men during a certain encapsulatum and agreement of knowledge. We constantly learn new and superceding science, so it is ignorant to believe that what we know today is truth in whole. No matter how much we learn, we will always (hehe) only be able to scratch the surface.

My two cents...
The laws of conservation apply to closed systems. If it can't escape, then it still exists within. If the universe is a closed system, then I do not believe light can escape it; and so light will run temporarily along a 'boundary' of sorts or become parabolic around some gravitic center. If the universe is not a closed system, then light will escape. Time and space are inseparable...one creates the other. The instantaneous movement from one point to another would imply zero-time and zero-space. So it follows that time and space are measurable which objectifies the two. If the universe is an open system, and light escapes, where does the light go? Does it deplete the energy of the universe? Does it add to the energy of something else? For light to escape the universe, time and space must be present to support the existence of that light. If time and space are present, then to what extent. Time/space are either infinite, or they have some boundary outside of the universe which would close the system. It seems that if the universe is an open system and light (mass/energy) escapes, either the laws of conservation fail and the universe dies, or energy is fed into the system from without. If the universe is a closed system and the light (mass/energy) stays within the system, the laws of conservation state that the universe will never die, which implies infinity...an open system. Or, if not infinity, then there are laws of conservation of space and time.

So, I can't answer the question.
 
  • #32
You are making the same mistake others have made in this thread. Please reread it and try to undersand the balloon analogy.

The universe has no boundary. Period.
 
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  • #33
I don't necessarily subscribe to the boundary idea. It most likely thins out into nothingness and has a very irregular shape. Even so, is there not some point where there is no more universe matter? The alternative is that the universe extends out into infinity and is no longer an object unto itself, but a theologic specimen. Unlikely, but not impossible. Either way, the question of whether the universe is an open system or not is still valid.
 
  • #34
It does not "thin out into nothingness". That's basically a soft boundary anyway. It also does not have to be spatially infinite.

Again, reread the thread.
 
  • #35
natski said:
... Is it just me or does this topic have to be explained every 3 days? Think about the balloon analogy, lots of dots on a balloon represent the galaxies. As they balloon expands, the distance between them increases. A light ray will travel along the surface of the balloon and hence there is no boundary.

How about some sort of 4 dimensional mobius strip? I'm not sure exactly what i mean by that, I just thought it up because on the balloon the dots are only on one side...:smile:
 
<h2>1. What happens to light when it reaches the boundary of the universe?</h2><p>At the boundary of the universe, known as the cosmological horizon, light continues to travel in a straight line until it reaches the edge. At this point, the light either reflects or refracts, depending on the properties of the boundary.</p><h2>2. Is there a boundary to the universe?</h2><p>The concept of a boundary to the universe is still a topic of debate among scientists. Some theories suggest that the universe is infinite and has no boundary, while others propose that the universe has a finite boundary.</p><h2>3. What is the nature of the boundary of the universe?</h2><p>The nature of the boundary of the universe is not yet fully understood. Some theories suggest that it is a physical boundary, such as a wall or membrane, while others propose that it is a mathematical boundary that marks the end of the observable universe.</p><h2>4. Can we see beyond the boundary of the universe?</h2><p>Since the boundary of the universe is the edge of the observable universe, it is not possible for us to see beyond it. This is because the light from objects beyond the boundary has not had enough time to reach us since the beginning of the universe.</p><h2>5. What happens to light that crosses the boundary of the universe?</h2><p>If the boundary of the universe is a physical barrier, then the light that crosses it may be reflected or absorbed. However, if the boundary is a mathematical concept, the light will continue to travel in a straight line, but we will not be able to observe it beyond the boundary.</p>

1. What happens to light when it reaches the boundary of the universe?

At the boundary of the universe, known as the cosmological horizon, light continues to travel in a straight line until it reaches the edge. At this point, the light either reflects or refracts, depending on the properties of the boundary.

2. Is there a boundary to the universe?

The concept of a boundary to the universe is still a topic of debate among scientists. Some theories suggest that the universe is infinite and has no boundary, while others propose that the universe has a finite boundary.

3. What is the nature of the boundary of the universe?

The nature of the boundary of the universe is not yet fully understood. Some theories suggest that it is a physical boundary, such as a wall or membrane, while others propose that it is a mathematical boundary that marks the end of the observable universe.

4. Can we see beyond the boundary of the universe?

Since the boundary of the universe is the edge of the observable universe, it is not possible for us to see beyond it. This is because the light from objects beyond the boundary has not had enough time to reach us since the beginning of the universe.

5. What happens to light that crosses the boundary of the universe?

If the boundary of the universe is a physical barrier, then the light that crosses it may be reflected or absorbed. However, if the boundary is a mathematical concept, the light will continue to travel in a straight line, but we will not be able to observe it beyond the boundary.

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