I keep getting theories, but I am hoping for things we can be more sure of; but theories are good provided you can explain how is the nature of the boundary of the cosmos with respect to your theory.
It seems to me photons can not travel into an infinite void, but they always come to some atom somewhere eventually, otherwise the universe would not be able to conserve its matter and energy.
Our solar system seems to be at or near the center of dispersion because otherwise the most distant visible stars would appear to converge over time.
There are various dimentions in a mathematical sense but there are only 3 component reference dimentions of spacial vectors. I agree that a bug on the inside of an inflated baloon can travel along the boundary, as an analogy; but what is the nature of the boundary, considering space should only be more curved under gravitational fields?
Since then space is least curved at the "boundary" then how could our explanations of the boundary hold?
2007-06-28
12:43:18
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7 answers
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asked by
David L
4