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16 answers

To answer this question there is no known end or no known begining, The time and space has always been and always will be, Man will never figure this out because our minds are not big enough to grasp it all,
No degree or any education will be able to answer this although im sure that some will claim they could but the fact remains to have them explain it ,,

SG

2007-12-25 22:12:49 · answer #1 · answered by SPACEGUY 7 · 1 0

Space is empty and is continuing to fill with matter and the end will
never come because it is circular and expands like a balloon.
What's the name of that comet that comes around every 58 years?
Is there beginning is there an end only God knows, when he gets tired
of us He'll start over again. We are only here on trial. Altone

2015-05-21 07:22:05 · answer #2 · answered by altone 1 · 0 0

The answer to both questions is a complete unknown. If you believe in the Big Bang theory, then you would tend to believe the known universe is at least 28 billion light years from edge to edge (14 billion light years from the center in any direction). But we don't know what if anything lies beyond that point. Is it just empty space going on infinitely or is there some kind of barrier.

Is it possible there are numerous universes that seen from afar would populate the vastness of space like galaxies populate our universe?

Is it possible our universe simply wraps around on its self like a giant sphere (or some other shape)?

Is it possible that our universe is all there is and it is involved in a constant cycle of birth, expansion, collapse, and explosive rebirth?

To a certain extent it's hardly worth pondering these questions because they lie well beyond the scope of the observable universe and we have absolutely no data to suggest any one possibility is more likely than another - at least as I understand it.

2007-12-25 20:22:02 · answer #3 · answered by Justin H 7 · 2 0

The End of the Universe would be a radius vector sweeping the Volume of the containment of the Universe.
At the End of the Universe is the Begining of a Domain which is called in the BIble "HEAVEN"
Theorethically no light can escape the Universe. And we do not have information in the form of light that is reflected back. Hence we cannot see the boundaries of the Universe.

2007-12-25 21:49:37 · answer #4 · answered by goring 6 · 0 0

For all practical purposes space ends at the event horizon we call the big bang. Practically we can see as far (back) as the Cosmic Microwave Background. But that is only 380,000 (light) years away from the distance behind which we can't see.

What is beyond that does not matter. It never did and it never will.

2007-12-25 20:19:23 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Well, much speculation, little proof. The best we can say is, theoretically, of course. But to get very logical, no.

My personal theory is, what if it just loops somehow? You go in one direction for long enough, you come back to where you started somehow. As of right now though, as far as the public knows, we have no solid proof for it ending or it going on forever.

2007-12-25 20:17:14 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

No there doesn't! Since photons act like waves sometimes, and like particles sometimes, and electrons act like waves sometimes, and particles sometimes, matter, in a way, doesn't even exist in the way we have thought. And if we don't really understand matter, then how can we understand the vastness of space?

2007-12-25 20:23:37 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

It would appear to go on forever or maybe only just out of our reach, there really doesn't have to be an end to it but I guess there would be if you wanted to say it's growing.

2007-12-25 20:16:32 · answer #8 · answered by C..... 2 · 0 1

I think it doesn't end if you mean just empty 3(?)dimensional space. Space just is. No starting no ending. Big Bang(s?) energy, galaxies, black holes, spreading, contracting, light, .... all that is (with)in no-light empty space (call it NOTHING, if such thing exist... ).

2007-12-25 20:18:16 · answer #9 · answered by timekiller finaly wireless 4 · 0 1

You should study astronomy. There is no possible way at this time to caculate the distance. Everytime engineers create new more powerful telescopes they find more galaxies.

2007-12-25 20:15:38 · answer #10 · answered by Wesley H 1 · 0 1