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| Tags: bangs, big, determine, due, hubbles, mistake, origin, perhaps, possible, still |
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#1
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Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error:
Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, in 1998 they determined the very opposite. For the above reason, there may ALSO BE ERRORS in the uniformity of the expansion rate.....and coupled with the possibility of a non- euclidean bent space would give a copernican REVERSE observation error. By "REVERSE COPERNICAN" meaning STRAIGHT light traveling the horizon towards New York would not come from a star but instead would come from a city at the opposite side of the Earth.(In this case though, we are speaking about light crossing the Universe instead of Earth) Thus for far distant light that which would be straight may actually be bent light, the bending would affect our readings from what is a uniform expansion. |
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#2
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On Jul 3, 9:28 am, " wrote:
Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error: Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, Can you provide a citation for that? Or are you misinterpreting "redshift" as "expansion rate" again? Hubble determined that redshift increases with distance. He didn't have data for enough distance to make the statement you are making. You are probably reading "redshift increases with distance" as "the expansion rate is slowing down". in 1998 they determined the very opposite. In 1998 they determined that redshift increases with distance. - Randy |
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#3
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http://www.womanastronomer.com/hleavitt.htm http://www.mada.org.il/website/html/eng/2_1_1-31.htm http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank...es/baleav.html http://www.windows.ucar.edu/tour/lin....html&edu=high http://www.britannica.com/eb/article...a-Swan-Leavitt -- Ahmed Ouahi, Architect Best Regards! wrote in message ups.com... Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error: Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, in 1998 they determined the very opposite. For the above reason, there may ALSO BE ERRORS in the uniformity of the expansion rate.....and coupled with the possibility of a non- euclidean bent space would give a copernican REVERSE observation error. By "REVERSE COPERNICAN" meaning STRAIGHT light traveling the horizon towards New York would not come from a star but instead would come from a city at the opposite side of the Earth.(In this case though, we are speaking about light crossing the Universe instead of Earth) Thus for far distant light that which would be straight may actually be bent light, the bending would affect our readings from what is a uniform expansion. |
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#4
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On Jul 3, 9:46 am, Randy Poe wrote:
On Jul 3, 9:28 am, " wrote: Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error: Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, Can you provide a citation for that? Or are you misinterpreting "redshift" as "expansion rate" again? Hubble determined that redshift increases with distance. He didn't have data for enough distance to make the statement you are making. You are probably reading "redshift increases with distance" as "the expansion rate is slowing down". in 1998 they determined the very opposite. In 1998 they determined that redshift increases with distance. - Randy My mistake, Hubble's observation established a fixed expansion rate, where as 1998's observation established an increasing expansion rate. Likewise they may also have observation errors where the expansion rate is not uniform when viewed in all directions in space, this could lead to capability of determining where the big bang originated. As well if space is non-euclidean and light doesn't travel straigth (but to the contours of space), then a reverse copernican observation error on the expansion rate may exist. (Reverse copernican since past copernican observation error (sun orbiting earth) was determined using STRAIGHT paths of light...****EXAGERATED***** example: at night instead of seeing the star from a distant horizon, in non-euclidean space you could "perhaps" see the sun from the opposite side of the Earth) |
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#5
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On Jul 4, 4:52 am, " wrote:
On Jul 3, 9:46 am, Randy Poe wrote: On Jul 3, 9:28 am, " wrote: Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error: Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, Can you provide a citation for that? Or are you misinterpreting "redshift" as "expansion rate" again? Hubble determined that redshift increases with distance. He didn't have data for enough distance to make the statement you are making. You are probably reading "redshift increases with distance" as "the expansion rate is slowing down". in 1998 they determined the very opposite. In 1998 they determined that redshift increases with distance. - Randy My mistake, Hubble's observation established a fixed expansion rate, where as 1998's observation established an increasing expansion rate. Likewise they may also have observation errors where the expansion rate is not uniform when viewed in all directions in space, this could lead to capability of determining where the big bang originated. As well if space is non-euclidean and light doesn't travel straigth (but to the contours of space), then a reverse copernican observation error on the expansion rate may exist. (Reverse copernican since past copernican observation error (sun orbiting earth) was determined using STRAIGHT paths of light...****EXAGERATED***** example: at night instead of seeing the star from a distant horizon, in non-euclidean space you could "perhaps" see the sun from the opposite side of the Earth)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Not exactly as what I wrote but as well, one can Google search: metric expansion of space http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_expansion_of_space |
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#6
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On Jul 4, 4:54 am, " wrote:
On Jul 4, 4:52 am, " wrote: On Jul 3, 9:46 am, Randy Poe wrote: On Jul 3, 9:28 am, " wrote: Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error: Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, Can you provide a citation for that? Or are you misinterpreting "redshift" as "expansion rate" again? Hubble determined that redshift increases with distance. He didn't have data for enough distance to make the statement you are making. You are probably reading "redshift increases with distance" as "the expansion rate is slowing down". in 1998 they determined the very opposite. In 1998 they determined that redshift increases with distance. - Randy My mistake, Hubble's observation established a fixed expansion rate, where as 1998's observation established an increasing expansion rate. Likewise they may also have observation errors where the expansion rate is not uniform when viewed in all directions in space, this could lead to capability of determining where the big bang originated. As well if space is non-euclidean and light doesn't travel straigth (but to the contours of space), then a reverse copernican observation error on the expansion rate may exist. (Reverse copernican since past copernican observation error (sun orbiting earth) was determined using STRAIGHT paths of light...****EXAGERATED***** example: at night instead of seeing the star from a distant horizon, in non-euclidean space you could "perhaps" see the sun from the opposite side of the Earth)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Not exactly as what I wrote but as well, one can Google search: metric expansion of space almost 2 million search results http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_expansion_of_space- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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#7
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On Jul 4, 12:55 am, " wrote:
On Jul 4, 4:54 am, " wrote: On Jul 4, 4:52 am, " wrote: On Jul 3, 9:46 am, Randy Poe wrote: On Jul 3, 9:28 am, " wrote: Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error: Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, Can you provide a citation for that? Or are you misinterpreting "redshift" as "expansion rate" again? Hubble determined that redshift increases with distance. He didn't have data for enough distance to make the statement you are making. You are probably reading "redshift increases with distance" as "the expansion rate is slowing down". in 1998 they determined the very opposite. In 1998 they determined that redshift increases with distance. - Randy My mistake, Hubble's observation established a fixed expansion rate, where as 1998's observation established an increasing expansion rate. Likewise they may also have observation errors where the expansion rate is not uniform when viewed in all directions in space, this could lead to capability of determining where the big bang originated. As well if space is non-euclidean and light doesn't travel straigth (but to the contours of space), then a reverse copernican observation error on the expansion rate may exist. (Reverse copernican since past copernican observation error (sun orbiting earth) was determined using STRAIGHT paths of light...****EXAGERATED***** example: at night instead of seeing the star from a distant horizon, in non-euclidean space you could "perhaps" see the sun from the opposite side of the Earth)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Not exactly as what I wrote but as well, one can Google search: metric expansion of space almost 2 million search results ....now find one that is understandable to someone with absolutely zero understanding of classical or modern physics. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_..._of_space-Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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#8
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On Jul 4, 5:27 am, Eric Gisse wrote:
On Jul 4, 12:55 am, " wrote: On Jul 4, 4:54 am, " wrote: On Jul 4, 4:52 am, " wrote: On Jul 3, 9:46 am, Randy Poe wrote: On Jul 3, 9:28 am, " wrote: Regardless of large versus small margin of Hubble's observation error: Case and point: Hubble determined from his observations that the expansion rate was slowing down, Can you provide a citation for that? Or are you misinterpreting "redshift" as "expansion rate" again? Hubble determined that redshift increases with distance. He didn't have data for enough distance to make the statement you are making. You are probably reading "redshift increases with distance" as "the expansion rate is slowing down". in 1998 they determined the very opposite. In 1998 they determined that redshift increases with distance. - Randy My mistake, Hubble's observation established a fixed expansion rate, where as 1998's observation established an increasing expansion rate. Likewise they may also have observation errors where the expansion rate is not uniform when viewed in all directions in space, this could lead to capability of determining where the big bang originated. As well if space is non-euclidean and light doesn't travel straigth (but to the contours of space), then a reverse copernican observation error on the expansion rate may exist. (Reverse copernican since past copernican observation error (sun orbiting earth) was determined using STRAIGHT paths of light...****EXAGERATED***** example: at night instead of seeing the star from a distant horizon, in non-euclidean space you could "perhaps" see the sun from the opposite side of the Earth)- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Not exactly as what I wrote but as well, one can Google search: metric expansion of space almost 2 million search results ...now find one that is understandable to someone with absolutely zero understanding of classical or modern physics. Notably does that cannot comment on what they disagree with, rather than lament. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metric_...ace-Hidequoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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