This is an article about a new way to calculate astronomic distances that may change the accepted Hubble Constant by 15%.
This is what struck me:
How could the universe be ~15 billion years old, but ~150 billion light years wide?
Doesn't that imply that the average rate of expansion is an order of magnitude greater than the speed of light?
Admittedly my detailed astrophysics knowledge dates from 1975, but on the face of it this sounds impossible.
Anyone know what gives?
This is what struck me:
...
Scientists now estimate the universe to be about 13.7 billion years old (a figure that has seemed firm since 2003, based on measurements of radiation leftover from the Big Bang) and about 156 billion light-years wide.
The new finding implies that the universe is instead about 15.8 billion years old and about 180 billion light-years wide.
...
Scientists now estimate the universe to be about 13.7 billion years old (a figure that has seemed firm since 2003, based on measurements of radiation leftover from the Big Bang) and about 156 billion light-years wide.
The new finding implies that the universe is instead about 15.8 billion years old and about 180 billion light-years wide.
...
Doesn't that imply that the average rate of expansion is an order of magnitude greater than the speed of light?
Admittedly my detailed astrophysics knowledge dates from 1975, but on the face of it this sounds impossible.
Anyone know what gives?
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