Given that time is relative to velocity, mass and proximity to mass, how can astrophysicists estimate that the universe is approx 14bn years old using current scales of distance and local time?
@moonbus saidBut…
@divegeester
We know what the rate of expansion is. So do a thought experiment and reverse the process until the universe shrinks to a singularity; that tells you how long the expansion has been going on.
@divegeester saidActually, there are at last two methods of estimating the age of the universe:
But…
What I posted about relatively, mass, etc etc
@moonbus saidWhy not just discuss my OP instead of lazily posting links to NASA editorials.
Actually, there are at last two methods of estimating the age of the universe:
https://map.gsfc.nasa.gov/universe/uni_age.html
This help ?
@moonbus saidYour assertions have been disputed.
@divegeester
We know what the rate of expansion is. So do a thought experiment and reverse the process until the universe shrinks to a singularity; that tells you how long the expansion has been going on.
@metal-brain saidYup. That’s how science works. Keep looking for better evidence.
Your assertions have been disputed.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2018/07/27/there-was-no-big-bang-singularity/
@divegeester saidI find the most interesting portion of the history of the universe to be the invisible part, the horizon past which our instruments cannot measure, when the very early universe was too hot to propagate photons. This portion is harder to estimate because we have only theory, not observable evidence.
Why not just discuss my OP instead of lazily posting links to NASA editorials.
@metal-brain saidI haven’t made any “assertions”.
Your assertions have been disputed.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2018/07/27/there-was-no-big-bang-singularity/
@moonbus saidSonhouse was correct when he was referring to the universe have lumps, as I understand it anyway.
I find the most interesting portion of the history of the universe to be the invisible part, the horizon past which our instruments cannot measure, when the very early universe was too hot to propagate photons. This portion is harder to estimate because we have only theory, not observable evidence.
@divegeester saidI don't know what it would mean for time to be not uniform. Supposing 'time' went sometimes faster or slower, all processes 'in' time would also go faster and slower, including any clocks attempting to measure this -- so everything would still be 'in synch' and no fluctuation would be noticeable.
Sonhouse was correct when he was referring to the universe have lumps, as I understand it anyway.
As the universe expanded the matter/mass accelerated in all directions stretching out spacetime. My question in my OP relates to this expansion which wasn’t uniform in terms of the destruction of mass and therefore time would not have been uniform and in a constant state ...[text shortened]... tion and measurement of the universes age when we are only looking at it from our local perspective.
@moonbus saidThis is what happens and it would have an impact.
Supposing 'time' went sometimes faster or slower, all processes 'in' time would also go faster and slower, including any clocks attempting to measure this -- so everything would still be 'in synch' and no fluctuation would be noticeable.