Science and Astronomy Questions
Posted: 13 Feb 2019 01:31
Thankyou all. Some interesting ideas to digest. "Breakdown" is a bit of a strong word, but what I was suggesting was the problem of infinity. It's like dividing by zero. You can't do it.
I should have explained what I meant by the law of gravity, and yes the Newtonian constraints are noted. I was told many years ago (and its possible this was false, or has since been disproven), by a reliable source (a professor), that tests had been conducted in a vacuum (or at least as close as it is possible to get) dropping a feather and a ball, and though the time difference was extremely small, the objects did not touch the ground at the same time, which contradicts our understanding of gravity and the laws of motion. Is this some sort of science myth? Like the perpetual motion machine? It might be? I have never heard anymore about it, but it has always stuck in my mind as an oddity.
Good point about energy becoming matter. That is one possible answer. And also the notion that "nothing" may not be true. That everywhere, at every point, there is always something, even if only a couple of atoms or something else.
I suppose these posts bring to my mind the difficult problem of: infinity, nothing, eternity. Can the universe exist forever - eternity? These are concepts our mind cannot comprehend. We live on a planet where everything has a beginning and an end. Nothing is eternal - or at least, if it is - we cannot concieve this. Its the edges of our science, zero, absolute numbers (to an infinite number of decimal places) which cause us problems. A universe which always "was" and has no limits or boundary, simply does not compute. But then again one that began at t=0, does not either. The Jews have a saying for this: "who can know such things?"
With regard to numbers, measurements in the real world, being to an infinite number of decimal places. That is nothing exists in nature which is exactly 100.000 mm wide with an infinite number of zeros behind it, it made me think that our engineering standards are not actually to make things more precise. It is the opposite. Our standards of manufacturing physical objects are to make things less precise. Nature is way too precise for us. We simply want to produce two objects to a lower degree of precision, say to four decimal places.
Yes I read about the Big Crunch in Astronomy Now magazine I think. You are right of course that a deceleration in expansion does no disprove the big bang theory.
I should have explained what I meant by the law of gravity, and yes the Newtonian constraints are noted. I was told many years ago (and its possible this was false, or has since been disproven), by a reliable source (a professor), that tests had been conducted in a vacuum (or at least as close as it is possible to get) dropping a feather and a ball, and though the time difference was extremely small, the objects did not touch the ground at the same time, which contradicts our understanding of gravity and the laws of motion. Is this some sort of science myth? Like the perpetual motion machine? It might be? I have never heard anymore about it, but it has always stuck in my mind as an oddity.
Good point about energy becoming matter. That is one possible answer. And also the notion that "nothing" may not be true. That everywhere, at every point, there is always something, even if only a couple of atoms or something else.
I suppose these posts bring to my mind the difficult problem of: infinity, nothing, eternity. Can the universe exist forever - eternity? These are concepts our mind cannot comprehend. We live on a planet where everything has a beginning and an end. Nothing is eternal - or at least, if it is - we cannot concieve this. Its the edges of our science, zero, absolute numbers (to an infinite number of decimal places) which cause us problems. A universe which always "was" and has no limits or boundary, simply does not compute. But then again one that began at t=0, does not either. The Jews have a saying for this: "who can know such things?"
With regard to numbers, measurements in the real world, being to an infinite number of decimal places. That is nothing exists in nature which is exactly 100.000 mm wide with an infinite number of zeros behind it, it made me think that our engineering standards are not actually to make things more precise. It is the opposite. Our standards of manufacturing physical objects are to make things less precise. Nature is way too precise for us. We simply want to produce two objects to a lower degree of precision, say to four decimal places.
Yes I read about the Big Crunch in Astronomy Now magazine I think. You are right of course that a deceleration in expansion does no disprove the big bang theory.