Originally posted by marcus
We should do a google search and see how these terms are being used!
Starting with "hubble time".
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~jh8h/glossary/hubbletime.htm
I just did a google search on "Hubble time" and confirmed that indeed it is the "inverse" i.e. the reciprocal of the Hubble parameter.
if H
0 is 71 km/sec per megaparsec then
Hubble time = 1/H
0 = 13.7 billion years
I just did a google search on "Hubble length" and confirmed
that it is c multiplied by the "Hubble time"
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/~jh8h/glossary/hubblelength.htm
In other words since the time t
H is 13.7 billion years
the length time c t
H is 13.7 billion light years.
THIS IS CERTAINLY NOT EQUAL TO THE RADIUS OF THE OBSERVABLE UNIVERSE which in comoving distance terms is more like three times that. For goodness sake Alexander check out
the University of Virginia Astro department site and get it straight.
Hubble length is 13.7 billion light years and this is not to be confused with the radius of the observable universe!
Majin! here is something for you to think about!
H
0 is DIRECTLY MEASUREABLE FROM OBSERVATIONS
this is terribly important, please forgive the caps Majin
you are a young fellow and maybe don't realize how important this is.
the age of the universe is not a measureable quantity. One can only INFER it using some theoretical model or other
but the H
0 parameter has an experimental meaning that allows it to be measured from observations (thank goodness!) so it is a rock solid thing. By the way it is not a constant! People call it "hubble constant" but it is only valid for the present moment, it changes thru time---the terminology is deceptive but that's just how the real world is: technical language often is misleading. But at least the thing is a well defined measurable thing.
And so 1/H
0 is also a measureable thing! A time quantity. One can say that it is 13.7 billion years (thanks be to Allah the allmerciful) regardless of what you think the age of the universe is and regardless of what model you use to estimate the age of the universe etc.
And the same with the Hubble length, which is c times the time.
(it is a very useful length, but it is not the radius of the observable universe, Ned Wright's cosmology tutorial, the distance scale in particular, should make that clear enough!)
Have fun.
Good question, asking about Hubble volume.
I still am wondering where you encountered it.
71 km/sec per megaparsec then
Hubble time = 1/H
0 = 13.7 billion years