colinr
- 29
- 0
If all space is expanding, does this include the space between the Earth and the Sun and perhaps. the space between a nucleus and an electron.
Yes, some even think that eventually there will come a "big rip" - that the acceleration in expansion will continue to the point where even atoms and subatomic particles are ripped apart due to the expansion of space. But if the expansion or cosmological constant is dependent on the other things such as the amount of mass in the universe, then perhaps the acceleration will slow at some point in the future.colinr said:If all space is expanding, does this include the space between the Earth and the Sun and perhaps. the space between a nucleus and an electron.
colinr said:If all space is expanding, does this include the space between the Earth and the Sun and perhaps. the space between a nucleus and an electron.
Indirectly perhaps, but the point I was making was that it wouldn't cause the earth-sun distance to increase over time. Likewise if it were removed, then if wouldn't mean that the Earth would spiral into the sun.Blueplanetbob said:Chronon
Are you not indirectly agreeing with Mike2 when you say that accelerated expansion in the universe can have a local effect within the solar system?
What would you call the theory that we are simply loosing touch with the gravitational field of those galaxies that are disappearing behind the cosmological horizon so that the pull of gravity is getting weaker and so the universal expansion seems to be accelerating?Nereid said:But what is the nature of this acceleration? Is it, as one poster noted, a big rip? While modest today, will it get stronger and stronger, overwhelming first gravity, then EM (which holds molecules together), and finally even the strong force?
Might it simply be Einstein's cosmological constant? Or Dark Energy of a quite different kind, quintescence perhaps?
Inconsistent with observation. If distant masses are disappearing behind a cosmological horizon, wouldn't you lose the gravitational assistance they provide to expansion from our reference frame?Mike2 said:What would you call the theory that we are simply loosing touch with the gravitational field of those galaxies that are disappearing behind the cosmological horizon so that the pull of gravity is getting weaker and so the universal expansion seems to be accelerating?
Well, let's see, roughly speaking E=K+U, the total energy of a system is equal to the sum of the kinetic energy and the potential energy. And generally this is conserved. I know that in GR that they do not speak of potential energy since gravitational potential would propagate through spacetime like a wave and takes time to get there. But I assume after a long enough time that gravitation potential will average out and at least appear Newtonian.Chronos said:Inconsistent with observation. If distant masses are disappearing behind a cosmological horizon, wouldn't you lose the gravitational assistance they provide to expansion from our reference frame?