Vincent So
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The energy states of a system are quantized if and only if the system is bounded. Light energy is quantized. Hence I believe our universal is bounded, i.e. finite.
Vincent So said:The energy states of a system are quantized if and only if the system is bounded. Light energy is quantized. Hence I believe our universal is bounded, i.e. finite.
jreelawg said:The question is entirely meaningless unless everyone agrees on a definition of "universe"...
hartgravesmik said:infinate. it could be no other way. if there was and end then there would be something beyond it.
marcus said:I agree that the universe could be spatially finite in a volume sense----but I don't imagine it having any boundary or edge. It might simply have a finite spatial volume with no boundary. However I don't follow your argument that it has to be that way. It seems to me that we don't know yet whether space is finite volume or infinite volume. There is a curvature measurment to decide this. Some progress has been made but it isn't conclusive yet. So I think the prevailing opinion is it could go either way
marcus said:Space could have a finite volume, and yet have no end. With a little effort one can imagine a finite 3D volume with no boundary or edge of any sort. So I don't see the logical force of your argument.
Wallace said:But that's not the question that was asked, and it is not what lay people generally mean when they ask 'is the Universe finite or infinite'. We can change the question to make it easier to answer, but then we are answering a different question!
mattex said:...
It continually plagues me. I even had a friend blurt out of the blue the other day, "What's with the universe? Does it just keep on going forever? Or does it stop? If so, what's beyond it?"...
Is the universe finite? (= implies a "Beyond")
Is the universe infinite? (= seems nonsensical, and counter-intuitive to "Big Bang" theory)
...
Pjpic said:PLEASE help!
I think I understand the logic of your question, but I haven't been able to find a source that specializes in dealing with it. ... It almost seems like trying to find someone that wants to talk about traffic congenstion but the only people you find are mechanics (who specialize in the internal combustion).
George Jones said:...If constant instants of cosmological time are used to foliate a Freidmann-Robertson-Walker spacetime into spacelike sections, then (as marcus has posted) \mathbb{R} \times S^3 results when the spacelike sections have constant positive spatial curvature with respect to the spatial metric induced on the the spacelike sections by the spacetime metric. In this case, each spatial section is compact and has finite volume 2\pi^2a^3. See Box 27.2 of Misner, Thorne, and Wheeler.
TalonD said:one other question. I don't have a problem with finite volume and no boundary,..
Or is there a reason why it absolutely can not have a boundary, some theoretical concrete reason?
hey Marcus, just curious, how would you do the calculations. (I'm not much of a mathemetician) Assume finite volume and radius is 100 bly, what would the radius and volume be at plank density? or I think I read in a post that bounce theory says it would be about 40% plank density is that right?
TalonD said:if a flat or open surface can be infinite, I don't see why a curved surface can't be infinite. In that case the radius of curvature mentioned earlier would be infinite.
And of course we still don't know.
Pjpic said:If it is possible to concieve of something physical being infinite then there should be no problem with having a sphere who's radius and diameter are infinite,
This is over my head but if both the diameter and radius are infinite wouldn't the diameter have to equal the radius. And if the only the diameter was infinite wouldn't the circumference have to be greater than infinity?
TalonD said:...
but again, wheather our universe is curved, flat, finite or infinite has to do with the critical density... I think..
Pjpic said:If it is possible to concieve of something physical being infinite then there should be no problem with having a sphere who's radius and diameter are infinite,
This is over my head but if both the diameter and radius are infinite wouldn't the diameter have to equal the radius. And if the only the diameter was infinite wouldn't the circumference have to be greater than infinity?
eha said:space is endless in 3D, our universe has boundaries,
That seems reasonable. Because, if It is not endless how could we ever be sure there wasn't something else past the boundary where nothingness started or past where a particular discipline was focused.
mattex said:Is the universe finite? (= implies a "Beyond")
Is the universe infinite? (= seems nonsensical, and counter-intuitive to "Big Bang" theory)
x→∞ said:Finite does not imply boundary. Infinity and unbounded are two different concepts.
---- I don't quite understand why infinity and unbounded are different concepts. Because, in my understanding, infinity means 'without end' and unbounded means "without an ending".
See that the area of the sphere is finite.
--- In the example of a two dimensional creature living on a 3 dimensional sphere, the boundary is that which prevents the creature from moving off the surface of the sphere (that which prevents movement within the space which it is embedded). Even if the creature is not aware of it, it is still a boundary.
Even if traveling infinitely fast, you may or may not be able to reach a boundary where time and space would cease to exist. You could not go past this boundary because on the other side there is no time, and there is no space.
Pjpic said:--- If there is a boundary that forms the end of the universe, it deals raises questions of nothingness (I think I read that constructive geometry considers 'nothing 'to be the inverse of 'infinte'). For example on the micro scale "nothingness" is often thought to separate two particles. Could that also be the case when thinking about a potenial nothingness beyond our universe (that the nothingness just separates us from other universes)?