The center of the Universe is yet not been determined hence accurately predicting or calculating the distance is still not done
2006-07-14 23:56:32
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answer #1
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answered by Explorer 5
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The Big Bang theory proposes that, in the early nanoseconds of its existence, the universe was an extremely dense collection of mass and energy in one very small space. Any such theory needs to specify mechanisms causing this expansion and rules governing how it happens. For any of those theories, ask whether an observer at any point in time and space can take measurements and determine where the center was. As I understand it, there are some classes of 'uniform' expansion where you can't tell. Wherever you are, everywhere you look, things are expanding the same way. If one such theory is correct, your question can't be answered.
2006-07-15 11:02:49
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answer #2
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answered by Frank N 7
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I know...
SAme as the distance between Universe center and the earth...
Oh I'm Einstein>>>>>
2006-07-15 06:56:48
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answer #3
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answered by atif s 2
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Who says the universe has a center? Imagine the universe is the surface of a sphere. Anything inside the sphere or outside the sphere is not in the universe, just the surface. Now, where is the center? It's everywhere...and nowhere.
2006-07-15 07:33:24
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answer #4
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answered by C. C 3
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If the universe extends infinitely in all directions, it has no center because space itself is what is expanding.
If you mean just the observable universe, though, then we are in the center of that by definition.
2006-07-15 06:56:39
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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that is a number 50 followed by 83 zeros, multiplied by infinity.
We don't know how big the universe is, so therefore we can not know the center.
2006-07-15 06:59:57
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answer #6
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answered by ANTHONY M 3
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Infinite.
2006-07-15 08:17:30
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answer #7
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answered by AnswerGuy 2
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Impossible (right now) to determine....we don't know where the centre is!!
2006-07-15 06:56:25
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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