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0 answers
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Was "flow of time" equally fast during the life of universe? Is Doppler Effect the only interpretation of "shift to red"? [duplicate]

I'm an IT developer and recently I created a project where I tried to send signals between two threads in a slowing down environment. I simulated two points with their own clocks and tried to send a ...
aerion's user avatar
  • 101
4 votes
1 answer
676 views

Intuitive explanation of COSMIC TIME?

I came across the following statement, while studying a Newtonian model for cosmic expansion: "If $R(t)$ is the scaling factor, we can define the Hubble parameter as $H(t)=\frac{\dot{R(t)}}{R(t)}...
Ruba18's user avatar
  • 152
1 vote
1 answer
95 views

What happens if we let time expand in the FLRW metric?

If we multiplied the time differential (dt) by a scale factor that depends on time in the FLRW metric, what would this imply on cosmology? In particular, what are its implications on the cosmological ...
Ahmed Samir's user avatar
9 votes
2 answers
1k views

Has the age of the universe changed in 2023?

I teach high school physics and physical science. I was going through the definitions of theory and law when a couple of my students (of different periods) asked about some recent development that ...
Lux Claridge's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
48 views

Time from big bang to here [duplicate]

New to this so apologies for my ignorance, the simpler the answer the better. Here goes. Light took 13.5 billion years to get to us from the big bang. On an imaginary neighboring planet that is much ...
Nick Yiannop's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
104 views

If Inflation never happened before the CMB, and the present expansion were projected backwards, how old would the Universe be since the Big Bang?

The Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation is the oldest thing we can directly observe. To explain the near uniformity of temperature of the CMBR and the flatness of space, Cosmic Inflation was ...
rajnz00's user avatar
  • 11
1 vote
3 answers
280 views

Can the age of the universe actually be calculated through Hubble's constant?

I was reading a high-school physics textbook, and it stated that the age of the universe is equal to 1 / Hubble's constant. They even give a derivation: $v = H_{0} D$ and $D = vt$, so subbing in gives ...
DM Miller's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
131 views

Why is cosmological time unique?

According to the definition I have encountered for the concept of cosmological time, it is defined in the following way: The cosmological principle states that, at each location in the universe, it ...
Wild Feather's user avatar
-1 votes
1 answer
77 views

Could an observer in time determine whether time had no beginning or had a beginning infinitely long ago? [closed]

I don't know if this is more a question for mathematicians or physicists (or even philosophers), but what would be the difference between time having a beginning infinitely long ago and time having no ...
Michael Greaney's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
454 views

Calculation of age of Universe

The age of the Universe is about 13.8 billion years, measured by light emitted from the time it emerged from opaqueness. But how was the time from the "beginning" to 380,000 years (era of ...
Beaglet's user avatar
  • 303
3 votes
1 answer
236 views

Deriving the age of the universe

I am trying to work out the solution to exercise 8.4 from An Introduction to Modern Cosmology by Andrew Liddle. I could derive the Friedmann equation as below, $$\dot{a}^2 = H_0^2 \left[\Omega_0a^{-1} ...
CTZenScientist's user avatar
1 vote
2 answers
153 views

Can the age of the universe be much bigger than 13.8 billion

If observable universe is only a small fraction of the existing universe, does it imply that the age of the universe is much more than 13.8 billion years or the expansion of the universe is much ...
Varol Cavdar's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
44 views

If the universe is 13,7 billion years old how it could be infinitely large? [duplicate]

If the universe is 13,7 billion years old how it could be infinitely large? Maybe it is curved to account for being finite? But then there should be more spatial dimensions...is it right?
Janko Bradvica's user avatar
6 votes
3 answers
543 views

To what precision can we determine the age of the universe theoretically?

Does it makes sense to expect/hope that one day we will measure the age of the universe (in Earth's frame of reference for example) much more precisely, down to sub-year precision? Is there an ...
user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
89 views

Does time expand?

If the time component of spacetime does not "expand" in the sense that space expands, doesn't that imply that time must already exist in its entirety, past and future? I believe I have seen ...
Ron Rice's user avatar

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