dr-spock
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If radiation from the big bang has been traveling away from it's origin, how can it arrive at the same point from opposing directions?
The discussion revolves around the nature of radiation from the Big Bang, specifically addressing how it can be detected from all directions in the universe. Participants explore concepts related to cosmology, the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), and the implications of the Big Bang theory, including its interpretation as an expansion of space rather than a traditional explosion.
Participants generally disagree on the interpretation of the Big Bang and the terminology used to describe it. While some agree on the nature of the CMB and its origin, others challenge the appropriateness of the term "explosion" in this context, leading to a lack of consensus on the best way to conceptualize the event.
There are unresolved issues regarding the definitions of "space" and "universe," as well as the implications of using certain terminology. The discussion reflects a variety of interpretations and assumptions that may not be universally understood.
dr-spock said:If radiation from the big bang has been traveling away from it's origin, how can it arrive at the same point from opposing directions?
This might help: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/poor-mans-cmb-primer-part-0-orientation/, in particular, the discussion surrounding Figure 2.dr-spock said:If radiation from the big bang has been traveling away from it's origin, how can it arrive at the same point from opposing directions?
The big bang was not an explosion.Mantuano said:From _inside_ an explosion its energy comes from everywhere around any point. We are nor have never been outside, so it is completely logical that CMB comes from all around us.
phinds said:The big bang was not an explosion.
Please read the entire thread before replying. In particular when you are not familiar with the subject on a sufficient level.Mantuano said:From _inside_ an explosion its energy comes from everywhere around any point. We are nor have never been outside, so it is completely logical that CMB comes from all around us.
OOPS. I"m usually more careful in reading threads.Orodruin said:As pointed out in #3 already.
Orodruin said:I believe you have a very common misconception about what the Big Bang was. The Big Bang was not an explosion at a point in space which threw out material in all directions. It is the start of the expansion of space itself from a very small size and it therefore did not happen at a point in space.
There is no such thing as "beyond all objects" according to the Cosmological Principle.slatts said:... it had always been generally taken to mean the immaterial expanse beyond all objects, as well.
phinds said:There is no such thing as "beyond all objects" according to the Cosmological Principle.
Yes you are right, it is not if you mean a _chemical_ explosion, but some name has to be given to such an energy burst, and even the "bang" word relates to sound, so the word "explosion" is as valid as any other to describe that. Thanks.Orodruin said:As pointed out in #3 already.
Please read the entire thread before replying. In particular when you are not familiar with the subject on a sufficient level.
No, it is not. "Big Bang" was given as a dirisory term and is now just a name that has a specific meaning. "Explosion" also has a specific meaning and is NOT one that is appropriate as a name for what we call the "big bang".Mantuano said:Yes you are right, it is not if you mean a _chemical_ explosion, but some name has to be given to such an energy burst, and even the "bang" word relates to sound, so the word "explosion" is as valid as any other to describe that. Thanks.
phinds said:No, it is not. "Big Bang" was given as a dirisory term and is now just a name that has a specific meaning. "Explosion" also has a specific meaning and is NOT one that is appropriate as a name for what we call the "big bang".
This is a common misconception. I held it myself at one time. The myth is that Hoyle chose it to poke fun at the theory when promoting his own Steady State concepts.phinds said:No, it is not. "Big Bang" was given as a dirisory term and is now just a name that has a specific meaning. "Explosion" also has a specific meaning and is NOT one that is appropriate as a name for what we call the "big bang".
You are right, the CMB is changing. Today, we are receiving CMB photons which were emitted closer to us than the ones we will receive tomorrow. However, the regions of relatively constant temperature were large enough to make this a very very slow change.Rafael Munoz m said:Ok the radiation comes fron all arround because the universe is an hipersphere.
But
Why are we looking at that adiation as an old photo? That keeps Showing us the same face forever
That radiation emited photons, that are arriving to us today after a 14500000000 years aprox, but why do the photons keep arriving forever, it should be like an old movie that you can see it or loose it, after it is gone it is gone because the photons emited at that instant, reached us and kept going past us forever gone.
But we keep looking at the short wave radiation like if it kept glowing forever and we know that after it became a transparent universe it should have stped glowing
Ok, the emission area was big and kept expanding, and that is the area covered by the short wave radiation that today cover the inside of the sphere we can see all around us, but I question about the thickness of that photon train reaching us.Orodruin said:You are right, the CMB is changing. Today, we are receiving CMB photons which were emitted closer to us than the ones we will receive tomorrow. However, the regions of relatively constant temperature were large enough to make this a very very slow change.
Rafael Munoz m said:It started at the big bang supposedly, then stopped after 300,000 years when the universe became transparent to energy and atoms formed, then the photon train should have been just 300,000 years long and a very small probability for us to catch that brief 300,000 year photon train after 14,500,000,000 years.
Rafael, see if this helps: https://www.physicsforums.com/insights/poor-mans-cmb-primer-part-0-orientation/. Read the "Orientation" paragraph.Rafael Munoz m said:Ok, the emission area was big and kept expanding, and that is the area covered by the short wave radiation that today cover the inside of the sphere we can see all around us, but I question about the thickness of that photon train reaching us.
It started at the big bang supposedly, then stopped after 300,000 years when the universe became transparent to energy and atoms formed, then the photon train should have been just 300,000 years long and a very small probability for us to catch that brief 300,000 year photon train after 14,500,000,000 years.
Yes.Rafael Munoz m said:Once atoms formed, light and matter stopped constantly interacting with one another, and photons were suddenly able to travel freely. As a result, the Universe became transparent.
One instant it was an opaque soup and the next one a transparent universe being filled with protons and neutrons.
That instant before it became transparent, we see as a surface emitting the background radiation or a surface of last scattering.
We refer to this epoch as the "Surface of Last Scattering;" light from this period is observed today as the CMB or background radiation or short wave background radiation, because it is reaching us now as shortwave radiation from all around us.
Since we cannot be outside our universe, we are inside and it is like if we were inside a sphere with us at the center; the same for every place in the universe so every place is the center and we are just one of those places that feel at the center of the universe.
It's not an inconsistency; as people have been trying to explain in this thread, you simply have a misunderstanding. Did you read the link I posted above? Did you read the other responses in this thread explaining why thinking that there should be a 380,000 ly long train of CMB photons is incorrect?That background radiation surface we see today is that surface of last scattering, non the less, that light arrive to us as a train of photons that should be just 380,000 (using your numbers) years long after the singularity and that mean, that after that, the 380,000 light yearlong photon train go past us (The duration of the epoch when the universe was opaque), then we should be seeing the singularity or the time when the excess matter in quarks came together in a specific combination of three quarks to make either a proton or a neutron. When the quarks that did not combine were annihilated. Thus, a little over one and a half minutes after the Big Bang, the time when all protons and neutrons had formed; or the time when the universe was hyper inflationary and growing faster than light.
We should be seeing anything after the 380,000 light yearlong photon train, but we keep seeing the same surface of last scattering forever and that mean, we will be receiving and absorbing photons forever, each one with energy and that mean infinite energy being carried away by those photons, photons that arrive to us from all around us forever and that mean, infinite energy that we know is impossible because it is an inconsistency.
That is what I am wondering as an inconsistency coming from the standard model believed true today.
You have ignored what both orodruin and I told you. Continuing to repeat something that has been shown to you to be wrong is not going to make it right. Read our posts (18 & 19) again and see it you can make sense of them.Rafael Munoz m said:That background radiation surface we see today is that surface of last scattering, non the less, that light arrive to us as a train of photons that should be just 380,000 (using your numbers) years long after the singularity
.
Rafael Munoz m said:We should be seeing anything after the 380,000 light yearlong photon train, but we keep seeing the same surface of last scattering forever and that mean, we will be receiving and absorbing photons forever, each one with energy and that mean infinite energy being carried away by those photons, photons that arrive to us from all around us forever and that mean, infinite energy that we know is impossible because it is an inconsistency.
That is what I am wondering as an inconsistency coming from the standard model believed true today.
With our current knowledge, the CMB will eventually redshift to very, very long wavelengths, but it should always be around.slatts said:I've got to add that I've never heard any hint that the photons in the CMB won't always be around somewhere--they just might not be visible from here. (A lot of the local universes, however, might lack any perceptible difference from ours, just as it is here and now.)
Well, then i'll wait until a cleaner word is proposed for what has derisorily been called Big Bang to give a better explanation to the omnidirectionlity of CMB, being inside the cosmos where this has supposedly happened.phinds said:No, it is not. "Big Bang" was given as a dirisory term and is now just a name that has a specific meaning. "Explosion" also has a specific meaning and is NOT one that is appropriate as a name for what we call the "big bang".
The omni-directionality of the CMB is already part of the big bang model and requires no further explanation, as you will see if you read up on it.Mantuano said:Well, then i'll wait until a cleaner word is proposed for what has derisorily been called Big Bang to give a better explanation to the omnidirectionlity of CMB, being inside the cosmos where this has supposedly happened.