The universe and its matters: finite or infinite?

Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the nature of the universe, specifically whether it is finite or infinite, and the implications of this on concepts such as the center of the universe and the distribution of galaxies and particles. Participants explore theoretical aspects, analogies, and mathematical reasoning related to these concepts.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Mathematical reasoning

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that if the universe is finite, then it should have a center, while others question this assumption based on different geometrical contexts.
  • One participant suggests that the observer is always at the center of their own universe, regardless of their location.
  • A distinction is made between the universe and the observable universe, with some arguing that the observable universe is finite while the total universe could be infinite.
  • Another participant discusses the implications of infinite particles and light sources on the visibility of the night sky, questioning why it would be dark if the universe were infinite.
  • Participants explore the balloon/sphere analogy to illustrate concepts of curvature and center in different dimensions, raising questions about how these analogies apply to the universe.
  • One participant requests assistance with the mathematics related to measurements from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) and the shape of the universe.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

There is no consensus among participants; multiple competing views remain regarding the finiteness or infiniteness of the universe and the existence of a center.

Contextual Notes

Participants express uncertainty about the implications of finite versus infinite particles and the geometrical considerations that affect the concept of a center in the universe.

nemoover
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
It's been said that the universe has no edge, it's expanding, it has no center and the big bang was the birth of energy, matters and space-time.

I also often hear that it's been estimated the universe has approximately 200 billion galaxies or more or much more. Also the number of particles and matters is finite, otherwise we would have infinite amount of event, earth, you, me, star (the sky wouldn't be dark at night?) and scotch whisky (hell yeah!).

My question is where is the center of that collection of that 200 billion galaxies or any finite amount of particles? I mean if we had only 4 galaxies (or 4 stars) in the whole universe, we could calculate its center or its center of mass with any form of matter distribution and allocation in 3d space, right?

Many thanks!
 
Space news on Phys.org
I think the observer is always at the centre no matter if he is on Earth or moon . He is the centre of the universe.
Correct me if i am incorrect :)
 
nemoover, don't mix universe and observable universe
When you hear: universe has approximately 200 billion galaxies you should read: observable part of the universe has approximately 200 billion galaxies while the total number can be infinite if universe is infinite

Unfortunately, the word observable is being omitted in many cases.
 
nemoover said:
It's been said that the universe has no edge, it's expanding, it has no center and the big bang was the birth of energy, matters and space-time.

I also often hear that it's been estimated the universe has approximately 200 billion galaxies or more or much more. Also the number of particles and matters is finite, otherwise we would have infinite amount of event, earth, you, me, star (the sky wouldn't be dark at night?) and scotch whisky (hell yeah!).

My question is where is the center of that collection of that 200 billion galaxies or any finite amount of particles? I mean if we had only 4 galaxies (or 4 stars) in the whole universe, we could calculate its center or its center of mass with any form of matter distribution and allocation in 3d space, right?

Many thanks!
If you assume Euclidean geometry, then any set of points must have a "center". But in other geometries, that is not true. For example, four points on the surface of a sphere, in three dimensions, may have "center" at the center of the sphere. But thinking of the surface itself as the entire space, they have no center.
 
Good point, thanks, Dmitry67!

If the amount of particles/matters is an infinite number, then space, the universe and the number of light sources are infinite, certainly there's no center, would the sky be dark at night in this case?

But if the amount of particles/matters is a finite number, I cannot understand why there shouldn't be a center of the whole structure. For example, a Rubik's cube is made of many particles and they occupy a region of 3d space, we can calculate the center of the cube. The same math we can do with earth, solar systems, galaxies and a toilet paper roll (cylinder shape). Suppose the whole universe (not just the observable universe) has x amount of particles, no matter how they distribute in 3d space, should there be a center?

About the balloon/sphere analogy: Let's say there's a 2d creature live on the surface of that sphere, i understand there's no center on the surface and the the center of the sphere is not reachable (in another dimension...). But please consider this: If that creature choose a direction and keep going straight, eventually it will return to the original point/location. Let's name this point A, this creature also measured the distance it has traveled, call this distance D. So at D/2 there's a point B, now the imaginary straight line AB (just like Earth's north and south pole form a straight line) is the diameter of the sphere and center point C of AB is the center of the sphere. C coordinate (though not comprehensible) is calculable. If that analogy also works similarly with our 3d universe, given the Milky Way is pole A, where is pole B?

One last favor I may ask, could anyone help me with the math that led from WMAP measurements to this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shape_of_the_Universe
?
Your responses are highly appreciated!
 
Last edited:
nemoover said:
1 If the amount of particles/matters is an infinite number, then space, the universe and the number of light sources are infinite, certainly there's no center, would the sky be dark at night in this case?

2 About the balloon/sphere analogy: Let's say there's a 2d creature live on the surface of that sphere, i understand there's no center on the surface and the the center of the sphere is not reachable (in another dimension...)

1 Because there is finite time from the Big Bang, light has finite speed, so we can see finite number of objects. The area we can potentially see is called an observable Universe, and as I explained above, it is always finite.

2 Becase it in only an analogy. Curved 2D space can be embedded in a higher dimension flat space (for 2D it is 3D) but it doesn't mean that such higher dimensional space is real. It helps you imagine the curved space, but it is not required mathematically.
 

Similar threads

  • · Replies 20 ·
Replies
20
Views
2K
  • · Replies 8 ·
Replies
8
Views
3K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • · Replies 26 ·
Replies
26
Views
3K
  • · Replies 25 ·
Replies
25
Views
3K
  • · Replies 10 ·
Replies
10
Views
3K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • · Replies 38 ·
2
Replies
38
Views
6K
  • · Replies 3 ·
Replies
3
Views
5K
  • · Replies 44 ·
2
Replies
44
Views
6K