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Showing posts from October, 2020

Is the universe infinite??

  As a child or adult, one question that have definitely aroused in everyone's mind is  "Is this universe infinite or it has some boundaries?" as a science or  astronomy student this might be the first question to arouse in students mind.  Coming back to the answer of this beautiful question- The observable universe is still huge but it has limits. This is because we know that the universe isn't infinitely old - we know that the big bang occured some 13.8 billion years ago. So from this we can conclude that the light has had only 13.8 billion years to travel and hence defines the limitations of universe. All we know or scientists believe is that universe is still far above  from our observable distance but at some point it has limits for sure.

Is the universe infinite??

  As a child or adult, one question that have definitely aroused in everyone's mind is  "Is this universe infinite or it has some boundaries?" as a science or  astronomy student this might be the first question to arouse in students mind.  Coming back to the answer of this beautiful question- The observable universe is still huge but it has limits. This is because we know that the universe isn't infinitely old - we know that the big bang occured some 13.8 billion years ago. So from this we can conclude that the light has had only 13.8 billion years to travel and hence defines the limitations of universe. All we know or scientists believe is that universe is still far above  from our observable distance but at some point it has limits for sure.

Where did Earth's water come from?

  We all know that water is abundant in   space and is made up of hydrogen created in the Big Bang and oxygen released from dying stars. According to studies planets of our solar system were created around 4.60 billion years ago from clumps of rocks spinning around the Sun. Earth was  moulded from rocks that came from the inner solar system where the fierce heat of the sun would have boiled away the water. So, the water would have come later. But according to many geochemical studies or theories have concluded that asteroids are most likely the primary source of Earth's water. Carbonaceous chondrites –which are a subclass of the oldest meteorites in the Solar System–have isotopic levels most similar to ocean water.

What is dark energy?

It was the time of 1920, astronomer Edwin Hubble discovered that the universe is not static but rather it is expanding. Now in 1998, the Hubble space telescope (which was named for the astronomer), studied supernovas and found that the universe was expanding more slowly long time ago compared to the pace of its expansion today. Now this  puzzled many scientists, who thought the gravity would gradually slow the expansion of universe or eventually cause it to contract. So this discovery or the explanation of the universe's accelerated expansion led to the hotly debated concept of dark energy,  which is thought to be the force that is pulling the cosmos apart at ever increasing speeds. While this dark energy is thought to make up approximately 73 percent of the universe, the force remains elusive and is yet to be directly detected. Science staff writer Adrian Cho wrote. "Dark energy may never reveal its nature, Still scientists remain optimistic that nature will cooperate and tha