cosmic.ash said:
if 2 points in space are moving at relavistic speeds (or at the speed of light) away from each other wouldn't they be cut off from each other as light(and other forces) would never reach them from each other
would they form 2 different universes
a partition of the universe like that----using each observer's horizon----would lead to a certain amount of confusion.
there are galaxies we are looking at right now, which we are studying today, that according to you would not be in our universe. because if someone there tried to send us a signal TODAY it would never reach us.
they are part of our causal past, we study them, they have affected us and will continue to for some time to affect us, but according to you they would not be part of our universe.
so your definition makes the idea of universe kind of awkward.
another awkwardness is that you are proposing to divide the universe (as we usually think of it) into two parts, where people out at the boundary would not notice anything. for them everything looks more or less like it does to us-----they have a different horizon. so your division is OBSERVER-DEPENDENT. in principle every observer has a different universe which is his (seen from the standpoint of his galaxy)
linguistically it would not be very practical to talk like that, we'd have to rewrite all the books that use the word universe, and things would be harder to say, sentences would get longer and so on.
astronomers already have terminology to designate the PARTS of the universe (1)those which HAVE affected us and from which we've gotten light signals etc and also (2)those in which events happening NOW can in FUTURE influence us and also (3) those receding faster than light by Hubble expansion.
These are 3 different horizons. (1) is called the particle horizon, (2) is called the cosmological event horizon, and (3) is the Hubble radius.
1. the particle horizon distance is around 47 Bly if I remember right
2. the event horizon distance is around roughly 16 Bly
3. the Hubble radius is roughly 13.5-13.8 Bly, these are just estimates.
a neat fact is that a galaxy can be beyond the Hubble radius, that is TODAY receding faster than c, and can today send us some light, and as long as the galaxy is not outside the 16 Bly event horizon that light will still eventually reach us! This is a fact that gives some people trouble when they first encounter it. they think that the Hubble radius and the event horizon should coincide but they don't coincide----16 > 14. Just a detail though.