English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Just Imagine and try to give with your own imagination an answer.

2006-08-12 02:53:05 · 18 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Astronomy & Space

18 answers

Let me try:
Dive into a dark Ocean to a 100 meter depth.
Now use a capsule with a light in it and see how it slowly moves to the surface.
Imagine every meter this capsule is moving to the surface is one Light-year.
Now if you don't know that you are in an ocean you would think that this light will just continue to move away from you until forever.
But once it is on the surface it can not move anymore.
Now you just need to imagine that the water evaporates.
The ocean gets smaller and the light moves back to you one day.

Now go up to a 1000 meter high into the sky and look down onto a still ocean in a clear night.
That is properly how the Universe looks from the outside.

2006-08-12 03:45:04 · answer #1 · answered by Chacko 2 · 0 1

You are wise beyond your years. I hope you live long and continue your pursuit of knowledge. I think it would look like a crystal ball in some way. If we could see things in different dimensions, it would be a conceptual picture rather than a visual picture. The mind sees things better than our eyes.

2006-08-12 10:07:15 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Yup. A black void with an elliptical volume full of sparkley points of light and nice swirly patterns.

Of course, this is only in my imagination, I suspect there's some laws of universal physics we don't know about yet which prevent us from ever actually leaving the universe as we know it.

2006-08-12 10:00:23 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

How I imagine it is looking at a Black ball with lights like silver dust glowing from inside - some in a spiral pattern and a few in different colours ! quite a beautiful sight !

2006-08-12 10:04:29 · answer #4 · answered by R G 5 · 0 2

If I were outside of the universe looking right at it, I would see nothing. For light to hit my eyes, it has to leave the universe. The universe is expanding at the speed of light, so you can't see it until you are in it.

2006-08-12 11:02:01 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

You could NOT "see" the universe (our universe)!
Everything that exists (for us) is PART of our universe, including light, matter and energy.
If you were to go "out" of the universe to look at it, you would have to BE in ANOTHER universe, and the two universes are not linked/connected together, so nothing goes from one to the other.
You would not see it because you would not... BE (at least for us).
That does not mean that there are no other universes, but we can't "reach" them (if we could, they would be part of our universe, and then, not outside!).

2006-08-12 11:26:23 · answer #6 · answered by just "JR" 7 · 0 2

Oh I bet it will look really cool and beautiful, but maybe thats because I LOVE astronomy... Here's a site of an artist's concept (taken from the information they gathered about the universe) of a huge part of the universe...

http://www.collegiumfabrorum.org/images/cosmic_gc3_new%5b1%5d.gif

2006-08-12 10:03:52 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

There is more than 9000000000000000000000000000 nuiverses outside the universe, from what number universe you wish to enjoy the scene.

2006-08-12 10:33:16 · answer #8 · answered by Rana S 2 · 0 2

can you imagine yourself out of your body. how does it sound that you make with one hand? Its all in our mind the way we conceive our thought patterns. We ourselves have defined the Universe and ask question which are irrelveant. It some thing like a guy belives in GOD's omnipotence and omnistrength and you ask him the question if GOD can make a huge mountain that he cannot lift it. In mathematical terms you say x=y and then also say that y!=x.

2006-08-12 09:59:44 · answer #9 · answered by om 1 · 0 2

It would look like a dot, filled with space and time. I wouldn't care, I would be outside of it creating my own universe.

2006-08-12 09:57:58 · answer #10 · answered by Jeff M 5 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers