Earliest Stellar Objects Found
Microsofts slave writes "Scientists belive that they have found the earliest objects (new zork times registration required) in space. 26 galaxies and three quasars were observed at thirteen billion light years away, at time when the universe is belived to have been only 1 billion years old."
A yes, the new Zork times, a very reputable paper.
Why not fork?
Does this mean the universe will hit old age and die faster?
...because I'm fresh out of Zorkmids!
pb Reply or e-mail; don't vaguely moderate.
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"Scientists belive that they have found the earliest objects (new zork times registration required) in space. 26 galaxies and three quasars were observed at thirteen billion light years away, at time when the universe is belived to have been only 1 billion years old."
If so, that means the average rate of expansion of the universe since that time had to be at least 4/5 C... Unless our physics model is flawed on the large scale, whish it probably is... Who knows, maybe the observed outward acceleration of the universe is due to a force many orders of magnitude weaker than gravity but repelling and inversely proportional to R instead of R^2 so it would be important on the extremely large scale but unnoticeable on the scale of individual galaxies... That would fubar all our redshift measurements and wreak havoc on our largely speculative cosmological model... who knows...
Repeal the DMCA!
If everything started with a Big Bang from a singularity roughly 10-20 billion years ago, how is it that things came to be physcially 13 billion or more light years apart? I understand that the "Doppler" redshift is caused by great speed away from us. But is the universe seriously expanding at anything near lightspeed?
Some suggest that initial expansion was faster than light speed, and that the Hubble expansion is accelerating.
"Earliest Stellar Objects" is a mistake. The article is about quasars and galaxies.
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The article is not about quasars. Quasars are sisters of a group of objects known as QSOs. QSOs and quasars are bright across 15 orders of magnitude of the light energy spectrum, but quasars are radio-bright and QSOs are not. There was no mention in the article of radio studies being performed in concert with the visible and infrared observations, so these objects are QSOs until further notice. And since the galaxies are only visible because of the stars in them, the article's title is partly correct.
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