Astro Santi
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- Homework Statement
- I am trying to understand the concept of the observable universe and why there are regions whose light has not yet reached us, despite the universe having a finite age (~13.8 billion years).
- Relevant Equations
- Hubble’s law:
v = H₀d
My understanding is that light from distant regions has been traveling toward us since the early universe. Therefore, if the expansion rate of the universe were always less than the speed of light, I would expect that we should eventually receive light from all regions.
However, I have read that some regions are receding from us faster than the speed of light due to the expansion of space itself, and that this prevents their light from ever reaching us.
I find this confusing because it seems to contradict the idea that nothing can move faster than light.
So my question is:
How does cosmic expansion allow regions of space to become permanently unobservable, and how is this consistent with the relativistic limit on the speed of light?
However, I have read that some regions are receding from us faster than the speed of light due to the expansion of space itself, and that this prevents their light from ever reaching us.
I find this confusing because it seems to contradict the idea that nothing can move faster than light.
So my question is:
How does cosmic expansion allow regions of space to become permanently unobservable, and how is this consistent with the relativistic limit on the speed of light?