Delight 4 U
New member
Our universe appears to be unfathomably uniform.look across space from one edge of the visible universe to the other,and you'll see that the microwave background radiation filling the cosmos is at the same temperature everywhere.That may not seen surprising until you consider that the two edges are nearly 28 billion light years old.
Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light,so there is no way heat radiation could have traveled between the two horizons to even out the hot and the cold spots created in the big bang and leave the thermal equilibrium we see now.
This horizon problem is a big headache for cosmologist,so big that they have come up with some pretty wild solutions,'' inflation '', for example.
You can solve the horizon problem by having the universe expand ultra-fast for a time,just after the big bang,blowing up by a factor of,well you already know the numbers in seconds,but no one knows what could have made that happen.
So in effect,inflation solves one mystery only to invoke another.A variation in the speed of light could solve the horizon problem but don't answer why the temperature of the background radiation remains an anomaly.
Give me your best shot at this problem,and i'll stop bothering you.
-Delight
Nothing can travel faster than the speed of light,so there is no way heat radiation could have traveled between the two horizons to even out the hot and the cold spots created in the big bang and leave the thermal equilibrium we see now.
This horizon problem is a big headache for cosmologist,so big that they have come up with some pretty wild solutions,'' inflation '', for example.
You can solve the horizon problem by having the universe expand ultra-fast for a time,just after the big bang,blowing up by a factor of,well you already know the numbers in seconds,but no one knows what could have made that happen.
So in effect,inflation solves one mystery only to invoke another.A variation in the speed of light could solve the horizon problem but don't answer why the temperature of the background radiation remains an anomaly.
Give me your best shot at this problem,and i'll stop bothering you.
-Delight