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Doris 1 year ago
#7 & #8 - there is nothing "outside" the universe because the expansion of space /creates/ space itself.

#20 - besides the fact that we can directly observe which of these is true (the latter), conceptually the former cannot be true. Think of it this way: if the universe existed infinitely far back, how did we arrive at today?
       
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Lavonne 1 year ago
Doris,
There is no "expansion" of space. You only fill infinite space with limited physically objects and You waste a lot of time to move from one object (say planet) to another.
       
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Evan 1 year ago
#2 False vacuum decay is part of quantum field theory, and highly improbable. We're all in a simulation, anyway, so no worries.
       
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Francie 1 year ago
An objects perception of spacetime is relative to the speed of light. A photon of light experiences zero time. This means when we observe a photon from the Big Bang, it appears to us to have been traveling for ~13.7 billion years, but for the photon, the journey was instantaneous.
       
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Lucas 1 year ago
#18 - Anything but metric huh ?
       
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Alexandria 1 year ago
“Energy cannot be created or destroyed; it can only be changed from one form to another.”
So when you die where does the energy go? God rest his soul, maybe not
       
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Kenj 1 year ago
Alexandria,

what energy?
       
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“Since the universe is expanding at a speed that us greater than the speed of light. We almost certainly will never be able to observe what lies outside if our observable universe.

The light from these distant areas will likely never reach us.”

 

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Outer Space Is Pretty Disturbing…
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