Would we be able to see an exploding "big bang" further out than the furthest observed

Marsoups

New member
object ? There was an article in new scientist and several papers about the current furthest observed object in the universe : http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn19603-dim-galaxy-is-most-distant-object-yet-found.html

I was wondering whether all this talk about 'dark matter' could be related to other 'super clusters' of mass that are not observable with our technology ?

Would an object beyond the depths of what is being observed here, appear blue-shifted if it was heading towards us ? Or would that light not be visible at all due to the distance ?

One has to assume that there is a limit to what we can view in the universe. One does wonder if the big bang we know about is the only big bang of everything, or whether the universe is a much 'larger' place than we tend to expect.

What are the chances that we would pick up whether there was other stuff / superclusters beyond what we've seen at present ?
 
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