Are all the celestial systems in the universe on a big plate?

In summary, there is no evidence to suggest that all celestial systems rotate around a single point or axis. The universe as a whole is not capable of rotation and there is no preferred direction or axis. The solar system is tilted about 63 degrees in relation to the axis of our galaxy, but there is no significant force causing it to align with the galactic plane. The solar system does oscillate above and below the galactic plane in a cycle of about 70 million years. Overall, the concept of a "plate" or single point of rotation for all celestial systems is not supported by current evidence.
  • #1
ronald_dai
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TL;DR Summary
Are all the celestial systems on a single plate?
It seems that all celestial systems are in different plates, e.g. solar system, milky way galaxy, clusters of galaxies...although different systems might have their own plates, it seems to turn out that small systems are always on the plate of a bigger system...so is the whole universe on a big plate? If it is, then what is there in the space along its axis?
 
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  • #2
Plate?
You mean a plane of ecliptic? Yes, if you rotate anything, the material, if it can interact with the other material, will tend to flatten into a disk shape. This is true of silly putty, galaxies, star systems, planets with their moons, although the plane of each might be fairly random. Our own solar system axis is nearly perpendicular to the axis of rotation of the galaxy.

The universe as a whole does not rotate and the material (all the galaxies) are more or less uniformly distributed in all directions, at least at a large enough scale. At smaller scales, they tend to clump into superclusters which have some minor overall rotation but not enough to flatten their shape.
 
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  • #3
The axis of the solar system is tilted about 63 degrees in relation to that of our galaxy.
 
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  • #4
Thanks for the answers...Maybe I did not make it clear...whether the axis of solar system is tilted about some degree to that of our galaxy is not important as long as the whole mass of the galaxy is in a plate , and whether the axis of this galaxy is tilted to the axis of a bigger system is not important either...the thing is whether everything in the end all rotates around something...

The answer from Halc seems to deny that possibility...but do we have the proof that it is so? It seems that many people assume there is some kind of attractor...if there is a big attractor, does it mean all mass attracted to it would rotate around it or just moving towards it from all directions?

Thanks
Ron
 
  • #5
There are large attractors, for instance (in order of increasing mass and decreasing proximity) Virgo, the Great Attractor, and the Shapley attractor) There is some net rotation about each of these, but no disk to speak of as far as I know.

The universe, if not finite in size, is incapable of rotation. Rotation around an attractor only works given the causal reach of the mass, so nothing outside our visible universe can have an influence on our motion, and thus we cannot rotate around it, however slowly.
Secondly, any finite angular rate multiplied by unbounded distance would have distant objects moving faster than light in a coordinate system where such motion is impossible.

Of course it's allowed in other kinds of coordinate systems. Relative to my house, the universe rotates overhead, and anything as far away as Neptune or more likely moves faster than c, but that's just a property of such a coordinate system. Nothing out by Neptune is capable of being stationary either in such a frame
 
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  • #6
ronald_dai said:
It seems that all celestial systems are in different plates axis?
"Plate" is a very poor description, since there are galaxies that are not at all "plate shaped". One of these types is globular galaxies, the Sombrero Galaxy is another.
 
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This is one diagram of what the universe looks like on a vast scale: filaments and huge voids.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Void_(astronomy)

Screenshot_2021-04-08 Void (astronomy) - Wikipedia.png
So consider why your question is confusing for the people trying answer you. It would be REALLY helpful for everyone if you could tell us where you got the idea of an attractor(?). -- I guess... No single point of rotation for the whole universe is known.
 
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  • #8
ronald_dai said:
the thing is whether everything in the end all rotates around something...

It doesn't.

ronald_dai said:
do we have the proof that it is so?

Yes. If everything was all rotating about something, the universe would not be isotropic--there would be a preferred direction (along the global axis of rotation). But all the evidence we have, including the extremely strong evidence of the CMB (since the CMB has existed since the early universe and so would have to show signs of any anisotropy if it existed), is that there is no preferred direction in our universe.
 
  • #9
Halc said:
The universe, if not finite in size, is incapable of rotation.

Strictly speaking, this is not true. There are solutions of the Einstein Field Equation, such as the Godel universe, in which the universe is infinite in size and there is global rotation. So we cannot rule out such a possibility on a priori grounds.

However, all the evidence we have indicates that the solution of the Einstein Field Equation that describes our actual universe does not have any global rotation.
 
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  • #10
Thanks for all the great answer!
 
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  • #11
Keith_McClary said:
The axis of the solar system is tilted about 63 degrees in relation to that of our galaxy.
OK, is there a force tending to get it to align with the Galaxy 'plate'?
 
  • #13
happyhacker said:
OK, is there a force tending to get it to align with the Galaxy 'plate'?
The solar system oscillates above and below the galactic plane in a cycle of about 70 million years.
 
  • #14
Thanks for everyone's input. Time to close the thread.
 

1. What is meant by "celestial systems" in this context?

Celestial systems refer to all the objects and structures in the universe, including stars, planets, galaxies, and other cosmic bodies.

2. Is there any evidence to support the idea that all celestial systems are on a big plate?

No, there is currently no scientific evidence to support this idea. In fact, the current understanding of the universe suggests that celestial systems are distributed in a three-dimensional space, rather than on a flat plate.

3. What is the theory behind the concept of a big plate containing all celestial systems?

This concept is based on the idea of a flat or "pancake" universe, where all celestial systems are confined to a two-dimensional surface. However, this theory is not widely accepted in the scientific community and is not supported by observational data.

4. Are there any ongoing research or studies related to the idea of a big plate containing all celestial systems?

There are ongoing studies and research related to the structure and distribution of celestial systems in the universe. However, these studies do not support the idea of a big plate containing all celestial systems.

5. How does the concept of a big plate containing all celestial systems relate to the Big Bang theory?

The Big Bang theory, which is the prevailing scientific explanation for the origin and evolution of the universe, does not support the idea of a big plate containing all celestial systems. In fact, the theory suggests that the universe is expanding in all directions, rather than being confined to a flat surface.

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