Antonio Lao
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Have cosmologists determined the total mass of the universe?
The discussion centers on whether cosmologists have determined the total mass of the universe, exploring theoretical, conceptual, and mathematical aspects of the topic. Participants engage in debates about the implications of mass measurement, the nature of the universe, and the challenges posed by dark matter and dark energy.
Participants express a range of views, with no consensus on the possibility of measuring the total mass of the universe or the implications of existing theories. Disagreement exists regarding the nature of dark matter and the extent of the observable universe.
Limitations include unresolved assumptions about the universe's structure, the definitions of mass and observable universe, and the dependence on current cosmological models. Some mathematical steps and estimations remain unverified.
Well, you sure are a confident SOB given what I suspect is quite a limited education. If you believe in the "big Bang" and relativity (which I assure you is valid) then the "whole universe" is the "visible universe". Now I will admit that we now know of no way to measure it accurately but the assumption that such a thing can [size="+1"]never[/color][/size] be done is a rather extreme statement.energia said:there is no way to ever measure the mass of the universe
since even it's limits are unknown
it's like asking how many demons will fit on the head of a pin
even the mass of the visible universe (which is not the whole universe) can never be acurately measured
if the universe is infinite then the total mass of the universe = infinity (exactly)
Well, you sure are a confident SOB given what I suspect is quite a limited education
If you believe in the "big Bang" and relativity (which I assure you is valid) then the "whole universe" is the "visible universe"
Does reality has its own independent existence? If you say yes then you are just like what Einstein used to believe when he was pondering the mystery of the universe.
I need help
Given that the radius of the observable universe is 47 billion of light years
so it's radius would be 13 000 000 000 lightyears since the light would require that much time to travel from it's point of origin