
Acceleration of the Expansion of the Universe
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Topic authorSitting Duck
- Posts: 44
- Joined: 10.10.2005
- With us: 19 years 6 months
- Location: Antwerp, Belgium
Acceleration of the Expansion of the Universe
If the universe is accelerating its expansion, and the universe was expanding at a pace faster than the speed of light directly after the big bang (size of grapefruit to solar system in one second?), then how fast would it be expanding now??? or has there been a process of deceleration, followed by acceleration, like someone taking a breath in blowing up a balloon 

Notes
Unintentional launch, cork was too loose to sustain adequate pressure
Very succesful glide
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Rocket started hissing, leak lead to a no-launch
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Unintentional launch, cork was too loose to sustain adequate pressure
Very succesful glide
Best launch so far
Rocket started hissing, leak lead to a no-launch
None
Leaked in fuelling stage
Have a look HERE
for a better explanation of what scientists think they know now.
for a better explanation of what scientists think they know now.
Brain-Dead Bob
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Topic authorSitting Duck
- Posts: 44
- Joined: 10.10.2005
- With us: 19 years 6 months
- Location: Antwerp, Belgium
Thanks, but Im not sure if this entirely answers my question. If i have things staright here, the universe is expanding, more space is being added, at an ever increasing rate, but what would this rate be?
Notes
Unintentional launch, cork was too loose to sustain adequate pressure
Very succesful glide
Best launch so far
Rocket started hissing, leak lead to a no-launch
None
Leaked in fuelling stage
Unintentional launch, cork was too loose to sustain adequate pressure
Very succesful glide
Best launch so far
Rocket started hissing, leak lead to a no-launch
None
Leaked in fuelling stage
The Hubble Term is the measure for the expansion speed. The last measurement in the "H0 Key Project" with the HubbleSpace Telescope lead to the value of
71 (+/- 6) km s-1 Mpc-1.
That means for every megaparsec (1 million parsecs, 3261633 lightyears) away from the spectator the expansion speed rises 71 (between 65 and 77) kilometers per second.
This is an "error" of around 9 percent. This is because we don't know the values of the so called "cepheides", stars used for distance calibration, precisely enough.
The inverse of the Hubble term is roughly the age of the universe, if the expansion is assumed to be constant.
al'be:do
71 (+/- 6) km s-1 Mpc-1.
That means for every megaparsec (1 million parsecs, 3261633 lightyears) away from the spectator the expansion speed rises 71 (between 65 and 77) kilometers per second.
This is an "error" of around 9 percent. This is because we don't know the values of the so called "cepheides", stars used for distance calibration, precisely enough.
The inverse of the Hubble term is roughly the age of the universe, if the expansion is assumed to be constant.
al'be:do