Reword your question in english, and I'll give you an intelligent answer.
2007-07-02 09:26:15
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Intrigued by your question I found a website :
http://math.ucr.edu/home/baez/physics/Relativity/GR/centre.html and I learnt, there is no centre of the universe :
According to the standard theories of cosmology, the universe started with a "Big Bang" about 14 billion years ago and has been expanding ever since. Yet there is no centre to the expansion. It is the same everywhere. The Big Bang should not be visualised as an ordinary explosion. The universe is not expanding out from a centre into space. The whole universe itself is expanding and it is doing so equally at all places, as far as we can tell.
In 1929 Edwin Hubble announced that he had measured the speed of galaxies at different distances away and had discovered that the further they were away from us the faster they were receding. This seems to suggest that we are at the centre of the expanding universe, but it must be remembered that motion is relative. If the universe is expanding uniformly according to Hubble's law it will appear to do so from any galaxy.
If we see a galaxy B moving away from us at 10,000 km/s, an alien in galaxy B will see our galaxy A moving away from it at 10,000 km/s in the opposite direction. If there is another galaxy C twice us far away in the same direction as B we will see it moving at 20,000 km/s and the alien will see it moving at 10,000 km/s.
A B C
from A 0km/s 10,000km/s 20,000km/s
from B -10,000km/s 0km/s 10,000km/s
So, from the point of view of the alien at B everything is expanding away from it, which ever direction it looks in, just the same as it does for us.
2007-07-02 15:04:20
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answer #2
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answered by Bernar 3
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The bible is not a science book. It's a collection of old stories.
There is no center of the big bang. If you could be 12 billion light years away (some of the farthest dots which Hubble can see), you would still see galaxies 12 billions light years away on both sides, towards us and away from us.
2007-07-02 12:51:00
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answer #3
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answered by Hgldr 5
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The big bang was not an explosion as we think of it, with a central "explosion" point. There is no "center of the universe." The Big Bang cannot have happened at a particular place in the universe, because before the Big Bang there was no universe.
And in the future, it might be best to put this kind of question in the religion section.
2007-07-02 09:34:26
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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The center of the big bang universe is everywhere and anywhere.
That '1000 yr.s is as a day....` means you don't take the time units expressed in Genesis literally. - Get it?
2007-07-02 13:11:36
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answer #5
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answered by Irv S 7
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Let us keep the religion and the science separate. The centre of the universe is a few billion light years from our earth.
2007-07-02 09:31:05
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answer #6
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answered by Swamy 7
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huh
2007-07-02 09:26:47
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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