Expansion and raisin bread

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    Expansion of the universe
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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the raisin bread analogy for cosmic expansion, specifically addressing how galaxies remain unchanged despite the universe's expansion. The metaphor illustrates that while the dough (space) expands, the raisins (galaxies) do not, due to gravitational binding. This gravitational force counteracts the expansion, allowing galaxies to maintain their structure. The conversation also touches on the complexities of spacetime curvature and Newton's first law in relation to cosmic movement.

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  • Introduction to general relativity and spacetime curvature
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John Helly
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TL;DR
What about the raisins?
Fascinated as I am of learning about cosmology, one metaphor seems particularly strained: the raisin bread metaphor for expansion. I get the notion of the dough expanding and how this accounts for the speed differential of the galaxies relative to each other; but what about the raisins? Shouldn't they be distorted into plums or dates; maybe bananas?
 
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The raisin bread, like all analogies, suffers many ills. But this ain't one of those.
In an expanding universe structures bound by gravity - like galaxies - don't expand. So the raisins staying the same as the bread raises in the oven is actually ok.

You've referenced an empty thread template, btw.
 
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Sorry about the thread. I get confused by all the options and conventions yet to be discovered. Hoping a reply to this doesn't make it worse.

What is it about gravity, presumably due to visible and dark matter, that exactly negates the expansion? Is there a thread you can suggest to the math underlying this compensatory mechanism (narrower than just GR; which I'm still trying to learn)?Mahalo.

Source: https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/expansion-and-raisin-bread.1083760/
 
Don't read too much into an analogy.

The expansion isn't a force pulling at galaxies and trying to stretch them - the galaxies are all moving inertially according to Newton's first law, just complicated by the curvature of spacetime. Individual galaxies and clusters are held together by their own gravity - they have stopped themselves from moving apart.

It's not radically different from two objects initially at rest in space falling towards each other because of their mutual gravitational attraction.
 
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Bandersnatch said:
You've referenced an empty thread template, btw.
I've seen this a few times. I think it might be a bug with the new thread page, or something like that.
 
Bandersnatch said:
You've referenced an empty thread template, btw.
It's a forum bug, reference now deleted.
 

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