Light Years And Expanding Universe

In summary, the conversation discusses the concept of being able to see galaxies that are billions of light years away and how this is possible since we are presumably traveling from the same origin. The distance between galaxies is also brought up and whether it is growing at a rate faster than the speed of light. The conversation also delves into the cosmic background radiation and whether it is only visible on the outside boundaries due to the universe expanding before its creation. The question of what existed prior to the creation of light is raised and whether particles were traveling at the speed of light. The conversation concludes with a brief explanation of the standard big bang theory and the opaqueness of early light due to interaction with matter.
  • #1
Atload
How is it that we are able to see galaxies that are billions of light years away considering that we are presumably traveling from the same origin? Would that somehow mean that the distance between the two galaxies was growing at a rate greater than the speed of light? If not, why not?

The same question holds for the cosmic background radiation--or is it since the universe was expanding long before the creation of this radiation, we are only seeing the radiation created on the outside boundaries?

Is the answer simply that there was a huge "head-start" between matter prior to the creation of light? If that's the case, then what existed prior to it? Were these particles traveling at the speed of light?

Perhaps this seems like a silly question, but it's one for which I have yet to get a good answer from my Astronomy101 teacher. :)
 
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  • #2
Originally posted by Atload
How is it that we are able to see galaxies that are billions of light years away considering that we are presumably traveling from the same origin? Would that somehow mean that the distance between the two galaxies was growing at a rate greater than the speed of light? If not, why not?

When the first stars started emitting light the universe was already a huge size. And the distance between the star that emitted the light we see and our place in the universe since then increased considerably.

The same question holds for the cosmic background radiation--or is it since the universe was expanding long before the creation of this radiation, we are only seeing the radiation created on the outside boundaries?

The cosmic microwave background radiation is suposed to be caused shortly after the big bang, when the universe became less dense, so that photons (from matter - anti-matter annihilation) could travel freely. These photons are supposed to travel anywhere and in any direction.

Is the answer simply that there was a huge "head-start" between matter prior to the creation of light? If that's the case, then what existed prior to it? Were these particles traveling at the speed of light?

The answer is: we don't know. But some theories developed assume there were scalar fields before the Big Bang happened.
The BB is the effect of large scale changes in the scalar field.

See for example http://moriond.in2p3.fr/J00/" for a lecture on inflation and the creation of matter in the universe.

Perhaps this seems like a silly question, but it's one for which I have yet to get a good answer from my Astronomy101 teacher. :)

There exists no silly questions, only not asking the question is silly.
 
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  • #3
Originally posted by Atload
How is it that we are able to see galaxies that are billions of light years away considering that we are presumably traveling from the same origin?

Well, first, we aren't traveling from the same origin. The Big Bang created spacetime and was characterized by a hugely rapid expansion of space at first. There was no matter at that time, just a soup of energy and fundamental particles. After about 300,000 years of expansion, that energy/plasma (which was everywhere with spacetime) cooled enough for those fundamental to glom together and form atoms of matter. At that point, the universe became transparant to light. Then over time, those atoms grouped together into stars and galaxies, etc. And of course, space kept expanding that whole time.

Would that somehow mean that the distance between the two galaxies was growing at a rate greater than the speed of light? If not, why not?

Once there were galaxies, the expansion of space was not faster than light (it is currently measured by the Hubble Constant...something like 60-70 kps/Mpc). Once stars/galaxies formed (already millions/billions of light years apart from each other), their light could travel to other stars/galaxies. About 13.7 billion years have passed since the Big Bang, so light has had almost that long to travel...so we can see things that are up to about 13 billion light years away in every direction. The whole universe is bigger than that. And don't forget the finite speed of light means that the farther away you look, the older the image is.

The same question holds for the cosmic background radiation--or is it since the universe was expanding long before the creation of this radiation, we are only seeing the radiation created on the outside boundaries?

The CBR is that original hot energy of the universe that keeps cooling as the universe expands. The CBR is, and has always been, everywhere. The Big Bang was not an explosion from a central point into empty space. It happened everywhere in the universe simultaneously (it's just that the points within the universe have been getting farther apart since the Big Bang). There are no outside boundaries.

So, I guess the point is that the stars and galaxies formed far apart from each other and it take light a certain amount of time to get from one place to another. The universe has only existed for a certain time, so we can only see light that has been able to reach us within the alloted time frame.
 
  • #4
Originally posted by Atload

Is the answer simply that there was a huge "head-start" between matter prior to the creation of light? If that's the case, then what existed prior to it? Were these particles traveling at the speed of light?

The standard big bang picture is that light and also some forms of matter were there essentially from the start, but the light was interacting with the matter.

The sun, for example, is not transparent because it is too hot and dense for a ray of light to get thru without being scattered. There was light in the early universe but it was continually interacting and being scattered----a kind of opaqueness. So we do not see that early light.

It is estimated that the universe became transparent around 300 thousand years into its life. The CMB photons began their journey then----it is sometimes called the moment of "last scattering".

The universe had become less dense and cooler, so that light could travel without constantly being absorbed and reradiated by stuff, i.e. being scattered.

I do not think of it as a "head-start", but there was this opaque period of 300 thousand years at the beginning.

Early, at the very hot time, speeds of particles were relativistic. Because high temperature corresponds to high speeds of moving around---high kinetic energy.

Originally posted by Atload
How is it that we are able to see galaxies that are billions of light years away considering that we are presumably traveling from the same origin? Would that somehow mean that the distance between the two galaxies was growing at a rate greater than the speed of light? If not, why not?

The same question holds for the cosmic background radiation--or is it since the universe was expanding long before the creation of this radiation, we are only seeing the radiation created on the outside boundaries?


Please look at the lightcones drawn in Ned Wright's cosmology
tutorial...you are learning "astronomy 101" and he teaches
"cosmology 101" at UCLA

http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/cosmo_03.htm

you must scroll down about 40 percent to find the pearshaped
lightcone

the side of the lightcone, in red, can be seen as the path
in a spacetime diagram, of a photon coming to us from
far in the past, like a CMB photon,
and traveling thru a space which expands as the photon
travels on its way to us

keep on asking questions
 

1. What is a light year?

A light year is a unit of measurement used to describe vast distances in space. It is the distance that light travels in one Earth year, which is approximately 9.46 trillion kilometers or 5.88 trillion miles.

2. How is a light year related to the expanding universe?

The expanding universe is the phenomenon where the distance between galaxies is increasing over time. Since light years are a unit of distance, they are used to measure the expansion of the universe. As the universe expands, the distance between galaxies grows, so the light from those galaxies has to travel a longer distance to reach us, resulting in a larger light year measurement.

3. How do scientists measure light years?

Scientists measure light years using the speed of light and the concept of time dilation. They use a combination of observations and mathematical calculations to determine the distance that light has traveled from a specific object to Earth in a year.

4. Can objects in the universe travel faster than the speed of light?

According to Einstein's theory of relativity, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum. This means that objects in the universe cannot travel faster than the speed of light, and if they did, they would violate the laws of physics.

5. How does the expansion of the universe affect the concept of a light year?

The expansion of the universe affects the concept of a light year by constantly changing the distance that light has to travel. As the universe expands, the distance between galaxies increases, so the light from those galaxies has to travel a longer distance to reach us. This means that the measurement of a light year is not constant and can vary over time.

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