ukmicky said:
Unless they are asuming to much and the universe is far more than we realize. Couldnt we be part of an island universe ,where we are resident in one of trillions of expanding spots/universes which will all merge to become one super universe in billions or trillions of years time.
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I'm do nothing different to what the island universe authors are doing after all they are theorising without knowing the big picture. They are asuming that there is nothing coming our way from beyond our deep field scans of the universe witout looking beyond and you accept what they say .
Where in the paper does it say they assume that? I am sure that the authors do NOT assume there is nothing "coming our way" out beyond the cosmic event horizon. There must be tons of stuff moving in our direction, at a whole range of possible speeds. So I have to suppose that you didn't understand something, Mickey, or that you
made up about their assuming there wasnt.
But if you can find where they say "nothing out there coming our way" then please show me the quote in their paper.
It is more fun if you understand the standard LambdaCDM model first before you start making up alternatives.
If you would please first understand the usual LCDM consensus model, and what Krauss Scherrer conclude from it, and then start disagreeing, you would come across as a more imaginative person.
Krauss Scherrer take for granted a huge multitude of galaxies our beyond what we can observe, I am sure. Astronomers normally do. they certainly do not explicitly state the contrary!
So when you say the same thing---and speak of trillions of galaxies out beyond our ken---it comes across as kind of old. It doesn't come across as new or relevant.
And untold legions of those galaxies must be hurtling in our direction. I am sure Krauss Scherrer would grant that likely possibility. The issue never comes up because it isn't relevant (unless they were traveling faster than their own light).
so if you think you are presenting an OBJECTION to them then you must not have understood.
We may need a thread about the cosmological event horizon[/color]
that is something you get after painstakingly fitting thousands of data points from supernovae, galaxy surveys, CMB, gammaray bursts etc etc., you fit the model to the data and you get a number of lightyears
the distance beyond which something can't get to you
even if it travels at the speed of light
Those untold legions of galaxies hurtling towards us, if they are ever going to arrive and merge with us as you suggested, would have to be going so fast that they
catch up with and pass by their own light which because it is only traveling at the speed of light will never reach us.
So I guess these legions of galaxies you say might be coming to merge with us must be made of TACHYONS or some exotic matter like MICKYONS. In any case I would not like to mess with them. They might not taste good.
My preference is for informed skeptics[/color] who understand what they are doubting and disagreeing with.