Chronos said:
That's the problem with infinities, you get swamped with paradoxes. Fortunately, our universe has a temporal cutoff, otherwise known as the finite age of the observable universe, which spares us such indignities. We are causally disconnected from any regions beyond this boundary.
Thank you Hubble. One thing you need to keep in mind is that the further The Hubble Telescope looks out into space, the further back in time it is looking too. The furthest Hubble has seen is a galaxy that is roughly 13 billion light years away.This means it took the electromagnetic wave (light wave) that Hubble is receiving 13 billion years to arrive. We are in fact seeing that Galaxy as it was 13 billion years ago.
With that said, we would now have to review Hubble's Law. Hubble's Law says that we are sitting in a uniformly expanding universe and the expansion looks the same, regardless of your location. Also Hubble's Law states that the Speed at which a galaxy is traveling away from is is proportional to its distance. This is proven using the Doppler Effect. All galaxies in the universe (except for Andromeda and any other galaxy that is gravitationally locked with the Milky Way) will be redshifted.
Apparently, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light right? Well there is a theory that the expansion of space itself can travel faster. Which would make sense giving the fact that the expansion of space is not an actual particle that has mass.
I would think that if this is true, then galaxies that are far enough away would eventually get to the point were it was traveling faster than the speed of light away from us, Canceling out the velocity of light itself.
Imagine being in the back of a pick up truck, traveling 50 kph in one direction. If you were to throw a baseball in the opposite direction, for that baseball to have any advancement in the opposite direction, you would have to throw that ball faster than 50 kph. If you throw the ball exactly the same speed as the truck but in the opposite direction, shouldn't it not move position from spot of release from your hand?
I would think that the expansion of the universe would work the same way. Anything traveling the speed of light way from us would cancel out the velocity of light traveling towards us. This would make it to where were would see nothing at all because there are no light waves traveling towards us at this point.
So I would think that the OBSERVABLE Universe is not the same size as the ACTUAL Universe itself. Please correct me if I am wrong at any point of this. Thanks