Use Of A Machine That Would Then...
News21 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Treenor4ish. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The speed of light is an absolute speed limit for objects moving within our universe.
However when we're talking the universe itself expanding such rules may or may not apply hence the suggestion of the inflationary stage where the universe expanded at a rate greater than that of the speed of light is not necessarily a problem.
Treenor4ish if you were dumbfounded at an accelerating rate of expansion you were in very good company pretty much all of the scientific community were too!
It's of course not the Hubble constant that describes the rate of expansion but the value of the cosmological constant (lambda) that describes the acceleration of the expansion.
It's got a real chequered history - Einstein put it in, then said he wished he hadn't ("my greatest mistake") and now of course it's back with a vengence.
have a read here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cosmological_constant
and follow the link for dark energy too.
I can't get over the contradiction here. Einstein and his pals told us that 'nothing (apart from light) can move at or faster than the speed of light. Now we are asked to believe that entire galaxies are tearing away FASTER than the speed of light (relative to us).
Furthermore we can still see them...
I can accept (almost) that they could be receding faster than light, but if we can still see them the light coming back to us would itself have had to travel faster than light.
As surprising as it may seem, jake, I disagree with your statement that "it's not the Hubble Constant that describes the rate of expansion, but the value of the cosmological constant (lambda) that describes the acceleration of the expansion".
The there is a tension between the cosmological constant and matter as to whether or not the universe expands, contracts or is static. Therefore, the rate of expansion (that we observe to exist a la redshift) is controlled, if you will by the cosmological constant, but says nothing about the actual rate of expansion described by Hubble.
Additioanlly, "... while the amount of expansion undergone in any one second by a typical cubic centimeter in such a universe (accelerating) is a constant, the number of centimeters between us and a distant galaxy will be increasing with time; such a galaxy will therefore be seen to have an apparent recession velocity that grows ever larger. (Source: Sean M. Carroll, U. of Chicago)
... in my opinion...