BosonJaw
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Given current technology, and applicable laws, what is the greatest distance at which we can see 1 star?
Unless I'm way off, wouldn't it be 13.7 billion light years? That is to say, the age of the universe in light years?pixel01 said:The deep field images of Hubble are about 5 bn light years. According to the BB, we can not see anything further than 13.7 light years.
SticksandStones said:Unless I'm way off, wouldn't it be 13.7 billion light years? That is to say, the age of the universe in light years?
Laura1013 said:You're forgetting about the expansion of the Universe. We can see much farther than 13.7 billion light-years.
Edit to clarify: We can theoretically see much farther than 13.7 billion light-years. Our technology and observational methods can limit us.
SticksandStones said:I don't understand. If the age of the universe is 13.7 billion years, and light in a vacuum has the highest attainable velocity, then how can we see further than even light could have traveled?
When the light left that star, it was much closer than 13.7Gly. Space ahas expanded in that time. The star can be much farther away frim us now and yet its light (from 10Gy ago) did not have to cross all that distance.SticksandStones said:I don't understand. If the age of the universe is 13.7 billion years, and light in a vacuum has the highest attainable velocity, then how can we see further than even light could have traveled?
Here is a supernova visible even in a small scope - that's 5 billion light years away.russ_watters said:The question sounds to me like it is asking how far away we can discern individual stars. That would probably be limited to our neares neighbors in our local group of galaxies - 10 million light years or so. Just a guess though.