- #36
cristo
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
- 8,146
- 75
There is no such thing as the boundary of the universe (as I'm sure has been said several times in this thread alone. I've not read through it all for a while, so may be repeating things that have been said before, but I'll give it a go anyway.rodman86 said:I'm not quite sure I'm understanding this question. Anyways, if a spaceshuttle is traveling in a given direction, and doesn't change this direction, it would soon "pass through" Earth's atmosphere (edge, or boundary) and continue on into space. Now if that spaceshuttle continues on and could travel at a speed greater than that of expansion (if the universe is expanding) and given an infinite amount of fuel and time, would this spaceshuttle not eventually pass through the edge, or boundary of our universe?
The 'expanding balloon' analogy is meant to represent a finite yet unbound surface which is expanding. This analogy is two dimensional: that is, the 'people' on the surface of the balloon cannot move in the radial dimension of the sphere. They simply see a universe which is expanding. It is finite, since if they walk in one direction they will, at some point, end up back where they started, yet it is unbound: in walking around the sphere they do not encounter any sort of wall or boundary, or edge, or anything of the sort.
I agree with Russ that we could do with a sticky on this: if anyone wants to volunteer to write one, let me know (or write it an hit report).