Science
Related: About this forumAstronomers spotted something perplexing near the beginning of time
Not long after the James Webb Space Telescope came online in 2022, astronomers jaws hit the floor.
I remember thinking, This just cant be right! says Mike Boylan-Kolchin, a University of Texas Austin astronomer.
The observations hes referring to would, to you and me, seem like little smudgy red blobs among a field of other smudges and blobs. But in his eyes, they represented a potential challenge to the story scientists have painstakingly constructed about the formative years of our universe.
That is, some time after the Big Bang, around 12-plus billion years ago, when the universe went from a dark, diffuse place full of gas to a light-filled universe populated by stars and galaxies. This is the era that laid the foundation for everything to come including our solar system, and you and me.
Scientists had some theories about what happened during this crucial period, but the new telescope put them to the test by observing regions of space humans have never seen before.
https://www.vox.com/science/24040534/jwst-galaxies-big-bright-mystery-black-holes-cosmology
Guess what...we don't know everything after all!
rurallib
(63,204 posts)montanacowboy
(6,304 posts)if you think about it too long it's very overwhelming - the question remains - where did it all come from?
SCantiGOP
(14,248 posts)Last edited Wed Jan 17, 2024, 09:21 PM - Edit history (1)
Once upon a time there was nothing; suddenly, it exploded into everything.
montanacowboy
(6,304 posts)thanks for that!
EYESORE 9001
(27,520 posts)that multiple big bangs may have occurred over the eons. I wont expound here, but its intriguing.
limbicnuminousity
(1,409 posts)consider the possibility that 'big bang' are ongoing at a cosmic scale?
It's amazing stuff, exciting even. Can you imagine traveling to the 'center' of 'creation?' I find it oddly reassuring.
EYESORE 9001
(27,520 posts)Jerry2144
(2,622 posts)They found chuck Grasslys baby pictures?
PJMcK
(22,889 posts)eppur_se_muova
(37,432 posts)AllaN01Bear
(23,057 posts)RainCaster
(11,551 posts)AllaN01Bear
(23,057 posts)spike jones
(1,777 posts)Mr.Bill
(24,800 posts)I am content with that.
Jilly_in_VA
(10,893 posts)just to say that.
I really don't appreciate all the smartass comments either, not that this article is about me. You'd think some of you would have grown up by now. enough to appreciate that there might be something bigger than you out there...
Mr.Bill
(24,800 posts)That's why I don't care. I clicked on this thread because the title interested me. Sorry if I somehow offended you, because that wasn't my intention.
Jilly_in_VA
(10,893 posts)to believe in something bigger than yourself, even if it's the universe.
Mr.Bill
(24,800 posts)Have a good day.
Martin68
(24,613 posts)I dont see the connection.
Mr.Bill
(24,800 posts)I just don't dwell on the big unanswerable questions we have about the universe. I am content with just being. I do marvel about some of the things they are finding with the new telescope, though.
Martin68
(24,613 posts)sound totally clueless about what science is all about. Its about learning about that which we dont understand. Just being in the now is cool but it doesnt add to our knowledge. Wed still be living in caves. Nothing wrong with that, but its anti-scientific to the extreme.
AZ8theist
(6,492 posts)Calling him "clueless" about science is disingenuous at best. He clearly stated he has an interest in science but does not dwell on questions about the unknown. That's not "anti-scientific", it's just the reality of countless millions of humans who are more fixated on their daily lives than science discovery.
I'm a militant atheist myself and am totally absorbed with scientific discovery. Doesn't mean I do research or experimentation. My disgust is with the ignorant that see science doesn't answer every question, then goes AH-HA!! GOD did it! "There's something bigger than ourselves" bullshit. Those are the ones who are clueless.
I confine my fights to creationists, flat-Earthers, and the other assorted idiots who think the Buy Bull is a scientific text book. Debunking that stupidity furthers the cause of science every bit as much as analyzing pictures from the JWST.....
Jilly_in_VA
(10,893 posts)doesn't presuppose God at all. My husband is not a believer in God, he's an agnostic, but he still believes in something bigger than us.
limbicnuminousity
(1,409 posts)some folks get agitated when "something bigger than ourselves" enters the discussion. Belief in a higher power gets shoved down a lot of throats especially if you've been exposed to some of the more fiery brands of fundamentalism in America.
Sometimes it's easier simply not to name "it". Naming "it" creates discord.
Cool thread, btw. Nice find.
Martin68
(24,613 posts)BTW, you dont seem to understand the word disingenuous. I suggest you look it up. The fact that he said hes interested in science is meaningless if he confesses hes not interested in the unknown. Thats exactly what science strives to know and understand. The cause of disease was once unknown. The mechanism for inheritance of traits from ones parents was once unknown. Mr. Bill would have been satisfied to leave it at that.
Warpy
(113,130 posts)and most people will start having brain cramps.
What is clear is that the universe is both larger and older than we are currently capable of detecting. Even in our own neighborhood, objects far older than the guesstimated 13.4 billion years the universe is have been observed. Add tp tjat the existence of organic chemicals and precursors to DNA wherever we've looked, it seems much of the universe is alive, one way or another.
Now that's being part of something larger than I am that fills me with awe.
I can't imagine needing more.
machoneman
(4,122 posts)Martin68
(24,613 posts)Mr.Bill
(24,800 posts)Martin68
(24,613 posts)Auggie
(31,803 posts)... as Spock might say. Thanks for sharing Jilly_in_VA.
JohnnyRingo
(19,317 posts)I mean, what is beyond the furthest reaches of the Universe? More Universe of course, or perhaps a parallel Universe that evolved separately with it's own mass explosion and we're seeing even older galaxies from that cataclysmic event.
By my thinking, as my mother explained when I was a child, there is no end to space. Beyond space, is more space, and it's possible there exists a realm beyond our mortal imagination that is ruled by its own legal book of physics.
But what do I know?
Jilly_in_VA
(10,893 posts)for speculation, and endless scope for imagination in all of this, wouldn't you say? Every time I look up at the stars I am reminded of how small we are, and how immense everything out there is....and how little we really know after all.
JohnnyRingo
(19,317 posts)Enough for an entire genre of fiction based on science theory. haha
sumus
(23 posts)Gods car keys?
Martin68
(24,613 posts)Thats why millions were spent designing, manufacturing and launching the telescope in the first place.
Jilly_in_VA
(10,893 posts)kind of presupposes that at least some people thought they did.
Martin68
(24,613 posts)rest on our laurels.
Beartracks
(13,579 posts)=============
Hermit-The-Prog
(36,590 posts)Those early galaxies are now very old, but farther away than otherwise expected.
Jilly_in_VA
(10,893 posts)a galaxy without any stars at all. That completely boggles the mind. Is it dead, or just forming?