We date
the age of the universe from it's expansion.
3) knowing the speed of light is the universal constant, we can judge
age of universe from how long it took those beams of light to reach our planet.
Not exact matches
Scientism itself could never be proven or established by the scientific method so you have conflict
from the get go (i.e. only knowledge out
of scientific method is fact can not be proven and it is actually the reverse as the Hubble constant alone disproved all previous known cosmology as to
age of the
universe).
At the Easter Vigil after the first reading
from Genesis chapter 1, describing the creation
of the
universe by God, the prayer that follows says: «Almighty ever - living God, who are wonderful in the ordering
of all your works, may those you have redeemed understand that there exists nothing more marvellous than the world's creation in the beginning except that, at the end
of the
ages, Christ our Passover has been sacrificed.»
As opposed to listening to the ramblings
of a bunch
of plagiarists
from the dark
ages who thought they could figure out the origins
of the
universe by copying what other religions
of the day claimed but tweaking it enough to call it «the truth»?
The questions
of the
universe and the intricate workings
of nature are far more awe - enspiring when viewed through the lens
of science than
from any religious text passed down through the
ages.
Against new knowledge, as men gain new wisdoms
from science and new power in the
universe, there is no Lordship
of Christ over all the
ages, unless His voice can speak with as much authority affirming and defining now, and a thousand years
from now, as it did in the market towns
of Galilee, in the Temple at Jerusalem, and along the shore
of the Sea
of Tiberias.
Astronomers estimate the
age of the
universe in two ways: 1) by looking for the oldest stars; and 2) by measuring the rate
of expansion
of the
universe and extrapolating back to the Big Bang; just as crime detectives can trace the origin
of a bullet
from the holes in a wall.
When God created this
universe,
from nothing, He made it totally formed /
aged / complete (what naturally takes billions
of years or so) at six - day - old!
And then he concludes:» [A] s knowledge
of our
universe matures, that ancient awestruck feeling
of wonder at its size and duration seems inappropriate, a sensibility left over
from an earlier
age.»
That the confidence in an orderly
universe and the impulse to venture on the unexplored which lay back
of them, as
of the science and the geographic expansion
of the
age, were to some extent
from the Christian faith appears clear.
If we have light which reaches us
from a galaxy which is almost the
age of the
universe, let's say 13.3 billion years old, how did we get that far
from that galaxy?
People can choose to believe it, but that does not make it science and anything
from it can not be legitimately taught as alternative theories
of science, whether in astrophysics vs. the «big bang», biology vs. evolution or embryology, etc., or physics and geology in determining the
age of the earth and
universe.
Contrary to your insinuations, I think just about everyone who graduates
from high school knows the Earth is about 4.5 billion years old, and that the estimated
age of the
universe is on the order
of 13 billion years.
I have no problem with anyone not knowing the
age of the earth or the
universe or... hmmm... where this all came
from.
By observing light
from different eras in the history
of the cosmos, cosmologists can compute the properties
of the
universe, such as its
age and expansion rate.
Considering we are seeing this giant black hole's activity
from a time when the
universe was only a tenth
of its present
age, astronomers are puzzled about how it could've grown so big so fast.
(Because Wiltshire starts
from a separate set
of physical assumptions, his numbers are different
from the now canonical 13.7 billion years for the
age of the
universe.)
«In a truly relativistic view, the
age of the
universe differs
from place to place,» he says.
THE MEANING «Recently the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe measured the
age of the
universe to be 13.7 billion years
from the cosmic microwave background,» Frebel says.
Because the
universe is expanding, light
from distant sources is stretched
from visible wavelengths to infrared, called redshifting, with the exact wavelength corresponding to the
age of the object.
The 3000 or so known unstable nuclides have half - lives
from fractions
of a second to more than the
age of the
universe — and theory predicts thousands more
Estimates
of the
universe's
age ranged
from 7 billion to 20 billion years.
That
age tells how long light
from the Big Bang has been traveling and so provides a clue to the size
of the
universe — but it's not the whole story.
The
universe's
age can be gleaned
from the sizes
of temperature ripples in the cosmic microwave background, such as these
from the DASI telescope.
Basically, the distant ripples appear to shrink as the
universe expands, so researchers can infer the
age of the cosmos
from their angular size on the sky.
The quasar dates
from a time close to the end
of an important cosmic event that astronomers referred to as the «epoch
of reionization»: the cosmic dawn when light
from the earliest generations
of galaxies and quasars is thought to have ended the «cosmic dark
ages» and transformed the
universe into how we see it today.
It resides in a luminous quasar and its light reaches us
from when the
universe was only 5 percent
of its current
age — just 690 million years after the Big Bang.
By measuring subtle variations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB), the remnant radiation
from the early
universe that pervades the sky, WMAP refined the estimated
age of the
universe (13.7 billion years, give or take), among other key cosmological parameters.
From galaxy distances, you are also able to answer some cosmological questions like the large - scale geometry
of space, the density
of the
universe needed to stop the expansion (called W [«Omega»]-RRB-,
age of the
universe, and whether or not the
universe will keep expanding.
But Hubble went on to make some
of the most important discoveries in the history
of astronomy,
from providing the best estimate
of the
universe's
age to discovering black holes in the center
of galaxies.
The survey's researchers analyzed light
from 26 million galaxies to study how structures in the
universe have changed over the past 7 billion years — half the
age of the
universe.
We see GN - z11 at a time when the
universe was only 3 percent
of its current
age,» said principal investigator Pascal Oesch,
from Yale University, in a statement.
Said van Dokkum, «Cardiac arrest is not expected until a trillion years
from now — that's a hundred times longer than the
age of the
universe.»
That far back, it would be so distant that the light we're seeing
from it would have started traveling away
from the galaxy when the
universe was just a quarter
of its current
age.
The
age of the
universe can be estimated
from the Hubble Constant.
Light
from the object travelled
from 13 to 14.5 billion light - years (ly)-- assuming an estimated
age for the
universe of roughly 14 to 15 or so billion years — before reaching the Solar System in March 2000, making J1030 the most distant object then detected in visible and x-ray wavelengths (Pentericci et al, 2002; and Malthur et al, 2002).
Geeks
of all
ages will find answers to the ultimate questions
of life, the
universe, and everything romantic,
from First Contact to The Fellowship
of the Ring and beyond.
Geeks
of all
ages will find answers to the ultimate questions
of life, the
universe, and everything romantic,
from First Contact to The Fellowship
of the Ring and
of whimsical 8 - bit illustrations, The Geek's Guide to Dating will teach fanboys everywhere to love long and more than one billion active users it stands on the top at present.
2018-04-08 16:02 Geeks
of all
ages will find answers to the ultimate questions
of life, the
universe, and everything romantic,
from First Contact to The Fellowship
of the Ring and beyond.
Captain Mal Reynolds (Nathan Fillion) and his band
of space cowboys (including Alan Tudyk, Morena Baccarin, Gina Torres and Adam Baldwin) while shielding a fugitive girl
from the The Alliance (represented by Chiwetel Ejiofor's ruthless agent), uncover an
ages - old conspiracy involving the deadliest bogeymen in the
universe, the Reavers.
From the age of dinosaurs to the mysteries of ancient Egypt, from early cave drawings to present - day sightings and cover - ups, Ancient Aliens ® takes viewers on a provocative, thought - provoking journey around the world and across the universe, beyond our wildest imaginat
From the
age of dinosaurs to the mysteries
of ancient Egypt,
from early cave drawings to present - day sightings and cover - ups, Ancient Aliens ® takes viewers on a provocative, thought - provoking journey around the world and across the universe, beyond our wildest imaginat
from early cave drawings to present - day sightings and cover - ups, Ancient Aliens ® takes viewers on a provocative, thought - provoking journey around the world and across the
universe, beyond our wildest imagination.
With a constellation
of stars returning to their familiar superhero characters in the cross-referencing Marvel
universe, breathlessly working to save the world
from a Marvel - certified menace,
Age of Ultron delivers what its audience wants.
The interconnected
universe approach is what allowed the Hulk to disappear
from the Marvel
Universe after the events in
Age of Ultron and not appear in another movie or in the
universe again until he's found in Thor: Ragnarok.
AGE OF ULTRON is as action heavy as you'd expect
from a Marvel
universe entry; before the opening credits have rolled there's a preposterously large scale battle to contend with.
In the history
of the
universe and even cinema, 1998 isn't far
from today, but it's far enough to assume you'll spot some signs
of aging in film.
A year ago, Whedon's The Avengers:
Age of Ultron found space to squeeze in three more heroes and a brand - new super-villain, along with another half - dozen characters
from the ever - expanding Marvel
universe.
As part
of today's effort, the New York Public Library is developing an e-reader app that will provide access to a
universe of digital books, including contributions
from publishers and hundreds
of classics already in the public domain, to create a book collection for students
aged 4 - 18
from low - income families.
It all starts with a problem common to every
age: Meerson's machine attracts the attention
of the politicos, who see it as a way
of consolidating power, leaving the scientist no choice but to climb into the contraption herself and decamp for another time, hoping «to prevent the entire
universe from being reshaped in the image
of a bunch
of thugs and reduced to ruin.»
CBR spoke with Executive Editor Tom Brevoort about the fallout
from «
Age of Ultron» # 10, which brings Marvel's latest event to a time twisting close and changes the Marvel and Ultimate
Universes in major ways.