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#1 2006-12-19 09:34:19

cIclops
Member
Registered: 2005-06-16
Posts: 3,230

Re: Background glow of the first objects in the Universe

165398main_firststars-20061218-516.jpg
Infrared background glow appears when radiation from foreground objects is subtracted (Spitzer)

Glow of Universe's First Objects

New observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope strongly suggest that infrared light detected in a prior study originated from clumps of the very first objects of the universe. The recent data indicate this patchy light is splattered across the entire sky and comes from clusters of bright, monstrous objects more than 13 billion light-years away.


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#2 2006-12-20 05:11:28

cIclops
Member
Registered: 2005-06-16
Posts: 3,230

Re: Background glow of the first objects in the Universe

Earliest starlight detection disputed

Asantha Cooray, a cosmologist at the University of California in Irvine, US, and colleagues have analysed the same set of Spitzer observations but contend that the brightness splotches come from normal – yet faint – galaxies born billions of years after the big bang.


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#3 2006-12-24 12:49:41

dicktice
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From: Nova Scotia, Canada
Registered: 2002-11-01
Posts: 1,764

Re: Background glow of the first objects in the Universe

I still get hung up on how the farthest objects could've expanded so fast as to be visible only after 13 or so billion years, without having expanded at faster than light speed. I know: recent theory gets around this apparent paradox, but before this the idea that we looking into the past the farther out we could see bothered me when no such theory that I was aware of had been published.... If anyone cares to take this up before I can find out the answer, please feel free to point out the fallacy of my thinking.

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#4 2006-12-24 16:39:45

John Creighton
Member
From: Nova Scotia, Canada
Registered: 2001-09-04
Posts: 2,401
Website

Re: Background glow of the first objects in the Universe

I still get hung up on how the farthest objects could've expanded so fast as to be visible only after 13 or so billion years, without having expanded at faster than light speed. I know: recent theory gets around this apparent paradox, but before this the idea that we looking into the past the farther out we could see bothered me when no such theory that I was aware of had been published.... If anyone cares to take this up before I can find out the answer, please feel free to point out the fallacy of my thinking.

Perhaps the notion that the universe was the size of a pea is misleading. If every point of the universe was expanding at the same rate and near the speed of light then in every direction you would look the universe might look small but in reality wouldn’t be small because of near infinite length contraction.


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#5 2006-12-24 16:56:14

dicktice
Member
From: Nova Scotia, Canada
Registered: 2002-11-01
Posts: 1,764

Re: Background glow of the first objects in the Universe

Ah, now that's a thought.... Care to compute that to confirm? My relativity  :oops: is a bit rusty.

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