- Feb 17, 2005
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radius, is 78 billion light years.
So, 4/3 pi (78billion)^3 cubic light years.
i thought it was pancake shaped
(thereby solving the great waffle v. pancake conundrum)
Having watched Space Week on National Geographic just a week ago, I can say with confidence that we really don't know the shape of the Universe. It appears to us to be spherical, but we have only viewed it from 1 point and have a limited distance which is visible to us.
Having watched Space Week on National Geographic just a week ago, I can say with confidence that we really don't know the shape of the Universe. It appears to us to be spherical, but we have only viewed it from 1 point and have a limited distance which is visible to us.
What did it say about whether we're at the center or not? I would imagine we're off to one side. In that case, does that mean we can see to the "edge" while looking in one direction while still looking at "stuff" when looking in another?
I don't know all the details, but I would think it's hard to know that as well. I mean, if we can't see to the furthest extent, who knows what exists beyond that?
ya, I guess I was just thinking that if they can somehow guess at the radius, they might know where we are
There isn't any method to make an appropriate guess. We don't know enough nor have the capability of making any kind of informed guess at such a thing.
i thought it was pancake shaped
(thereby solving the great waffle v. pancake conundrum)
EDIT: It's possible the "size" of the universe doesn't even exist. The human concept that is size may be complete bull.
