Originally posted by jjalexand
...
...
If a star's light takes 13 billion years to reach earth, and the start took at least 13 billion years to separate from Earth by that distance, doesn't this mean the age of the universe is at least 26 billion years?
(That is 13 billion years to travel to that distance + 13 biilion yearts for the light from it to travel back to us = 26 billion years)
...
Sorry if this is a well known paradox, but it always seems to be not comprehended, glossed over, or ignored by science writers. (And physics forum participants!)
https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?s=&postid=147179#post147179
this is a link to a post in the "astronomy reference" thread that serves as a linkbasket
there is a fair amount of vague thinking and confusion about the expansion of the universe and Lineweaver and Davis (two people at the University of new south wales) have made a valiant effort to come to grips with it.
they have a pedagogical article called "Expanding Confusion: popular misconceptions about the ..." which is being published by the Australian Astronomical Society
I don't know that I can describe the situation in a nutshell
two things can start rather near to each other, back when the U was expanding very rapidly, and yet the light take a long time to get from one to the other because it has (in effect) to fight against the expansion
they draw a kind of picture of this called a space time diagram
(a picture with space on the horizontal (or "x") axis and time on the vertical ("y") axis)
on such a diagram one can draw the lines for two objects getting farther apart and a line for some light emitted from one and evenually getting to the other
a galaxy (now very distant) could have sent us some light back when we were within only a few million LY and yet that light could have taken several billions of LY to get here
dont know how to advise you except to look at pictures in
Lineweaver and Davis articles
since they take more trouble clarifying this than anyone else I know
here are some links (two of those posted in the "reference shelf")
------------------------
http://arxiv.org./abs/astro-ph/0310808
Davis and Lineweaver
"Expanding Confusion:common misconceptions of cosmological horizons and the superluminal expansion of the Universe"
----------------------
http://arxiv.org/astro-ph/0402278
Tamara Davis thesis (advisor Charles Lineweaver)
"Fundamental Aspects of the Expansion of the Universe and Cosmic Horizons"
the thesis is around 150 pages IIRC so it takes a while to download
--------------------------
Charles Lineweaver
http://arxiv.org/astro-ph/0305179
"Inflation and the Cosmic Microwave Background"
good general survey of cosmology covering may topics but
with some space-time diagrams
and some overlap with the other articles