Goseki wrote:The edge of the universe is calculated based on the theory of the Big Bang. If all things started at the same wavelength of light from the explosion, the expansion of the universe is constant, than over time, the light from the initial explosion (edge of universe now) can still be seen, only it will be shifted greatly. If the universe was a singularity at one point, or came from a single explosion, than the light taken from all points in the sphere around us should be the same. While scanning, they found that it was true. Pretty much a constant light all around us except for a few points coming from large objects.
It doesn't quite work like that. We know the universe is bigger than what we can actually observe. The further from our viewpoint you look, the faster objects are moving away, space between things is moving. At a certain distance from us objects are moving away faster than the speed of light, yes that's right..faster than light. We can't see past that point. However, the objects themselves are not moving faster than the speed of light, space is expanding faster than light.. Now, to really make it weird, this happens at any point in the universe. Technically we are the center of the universe, but if we were somewhere else, millions of light years away from Earth, our observable universe would just shift to there. It's strange stuff.
The universe is infinite, but has finite boundaries.
We can "see" back to the big bang...but in all directions. There is no center of the universe. Space is expanding everywhere.
Pinoy, lol, no thread derail menz.