Beyond the observable universe

    • [DOCX File]hw1 - University of Michigan

      https://info.5y1.org/beyond-the-observable-universe_1_ee3569.html

      D) Every galaxy in the entire universe (not just the observable universe) exists within the cosmological horizon, so there's nothing to see beyond it. Answer: A. 18) Hubble's constant is about 22 km/s/million light-years, implying an age of about 14 billion years for the universe.

      what lies beyond the universe


    • [DOC File]Lick Observatory

      https://info.5y1.org/beyond-the-observable-universe_1_36883b.html

      Edge of the Universe: A Voyage to the Cosmic Horizon and Beyond Paul Halpern. Hardcover. 240 Pages. Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated. Oct 2012. US . $ 27.95. Description : An accessible look at the mysteries that lurk at the edge of the known universe and beyond. The observable universe, the part we can see with telescopes, is incredibly vast.

      observable universe vs entire universe


    • [DOC File]Parallel Universes

      https://info.5y1.org/beyond-the-observable-universe_1_03ae42.html

      a) According to the expression for the critical density from Destination 19 (Section 19.3), this density is proportional to H 2 , where H is the value of the Hubble constant at a corresponding time in the Universe. By what factor was the Hubble constant at z=1200 larger than in the Present-Day Universe.

      what lies beyond our universe


    • [DOCX File]Cosmology: The Origin and Evolution of the Universe

      https://info.5y1.org/beyond-the-observable-universe_1_127c64.html

      And the universe the observable universe because there actually is probably stuff beyond what we can see would be the size of a large city something like New York, or Philadelphia or Chicago. And so filled with dinner plates or elliptical galaxies -- they’re not round they’re spherical -- and billion of galaxies are within that space ...

      edge of the observable universe


    • How Much Of The Unobservable Universe Will We Someday Be Abl…

      Observing Beyond The Observable Universe. by Nick Hamilton / Fri Jan 23, 2009 13:15:31 GMT. Much is made of the idea that 'dark flow' may be a "window to that hidden place beyond the edge of the Universe". If so, then we are observing effects from beyond the edge of the observable Universe. Thus whatever is creating those effects is observable.

      new theory of universe origin


    • [DOC File]BigBang_07.doc

      https://info.5y1.org/beyond-the-observable-universe_1_83aa7d.html

      The observable universe extends about 14 billion light-years in every direction from Earth. We cannot see objects beyond this distance because light from these objects has not had enough time to reach us. During the first 10-43 seconds after the Big Bang, the universe was too dense to be described by the known laws of physics. Questions:

      beyond the visible universe


    • [DOC File]NASA

      https://info.5y1.org/beyond-the-observable-universe_1_803edb.html

      Assuming that this pattern continues, space beyond our observable universe teems with galaxies, stars and planets. Observers living in Level I parallel universes experience the same laws of physics as we do but with different initial conditions. According to current theories, processes early in the big bang spread matter around with a degree of ...

      edge of the known universe


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