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How large is the universe?

Life49

Member
Joined
Oct 12, 2007
Messages
81
God created the heavens and the earth. When I gaze up at the stars in the night, it is amazing to see so many of them shining brightly.

I have been told that space and all its creation is infinite. ( This to me, means never ending.) Comprehending that there is never an end to the galaxies and that it all goes on for ever and ever is amazing. It is hard to put my mind around to it, as in our every day living most things are finite.( They have some sort of ending.) All This was created by an awsome and powerful God.

Is there some verses in the Bible that explains that the universe is infinite and never ending? I know that it says the God created the heavens and the earth, but am usnsure where it says that it is infinite.

Life49.
 
The Bible does not speak of the universe in that word, but uses the word "heavens", as at Genesis 1:1. According to the Encarta Dictionary, the word universe is "14th century. Directly or via French from Latin universum “the whole world,” from universus “whole,” literally “turned into one,” from versus , past participle of vertere “to turn”.(Microsoft® Encarta® Reference Library 2005)

Space is endless, and even with the Hubble Space Telescope, it has not been possible to see the "end of the universe", may never be able to so, even with more powerful telescopes that are on the designing boards now. The depth of the universe is being seen as impossible to find the edge.

Just a century ago, scientists believed that the entire universe was contained within our galaxy, the Milky Way. During the 20th century, however, major advances in astronomy, physics, and technology revealed the breathtaking scale of the cosmos. Some of the discoveries have also been humbling. For example, in recent decades astronomers have come to the realization that they do not know what makes up over 90 percent of the universe. What is more, the discoveries that led to that conclusion have caused scientists to question their understanding of the fundamentals of physics itself.

For instance, based on the evidence then known, Albert Einstein believed that the universe was static - neither expanding nor contracting. However, American astronomer Edwin Hubble, in 1929, presented evidence indicating that the universe is expanding. Hubble also cleared up a long-standing mystery about certain fuzzy, luminous patches in the night sky, which were named nebulae because they appeared to be clouds of gases. But were these inside our galaxy, or outside our galaxy, as British astronomer Sir William Herschel (1738-1822) suggested over a century earlier ?

When Hubble first estimated the distance to one of these entities, the Great Nebula in the constellation Andromeda, he concluded that the nebula was actually a galaxy a million light years away. As Hubble charted the distances to other nebulae, he began to unveil the enormous scale of the cosmos and triggered a revolution in astronomy and cosmology. It was soon thereafter that Hubble observed that the universe is expanding, for he saw that distant galaxies were receding from us.

He also noticed that the farther away the galaxy, the faster the recession. Those observations imply that the universe of yesterday was smaller than that of today. Since the time of Hubble, astronomers have been trying to measure as accurately as possible the rate of expansion, referred to as the "Hubble constant."

In 1995, scientists noticed the strange behavior of the most distant star (SN 1995K) ever observed as it exploded in its galaxy. Like supernovas in nearby galaxies, this star became very bright and then slowly faded but over a longer period than ever before detected. New Scientist magazine plotted this on a graph and explained: “The shape of the light curve . . . is stretched in time by exactly the amount expected if the galaxy was receding from us at nearly half the speed of light.” The conclusion? This is “the best evidence yet that the Universe really is expanding.”

When an ancient servant of God, David, looked up at the clear, unpolluted night sky, he felt reverential awe, which he put to verse, saying: "When I see your heavens, the works of your fingers, the moon and the stars that you have prepared, what is mortal man that you keep him in mind, and the son of earthling man that you take care of him ?"(Ps 8:3, 4)

Science is in search of answers, but all too often one set of answers leads to another layer of puzzles. This fact calls to mind a profound statement recorded in the Bible at Ecclesiastes 3:11, whereby it reads: "Everything [God] has made pretty in its time. Even time indefinite he has put in their heart, that mankind may never find out the work that the true God has made from the start to the finish."

At present we can absorb only limited amounts of knowledge because of our short life span, and much of the knowledge is speculative, subject to change. But this situation is temporary, for God has purposed to grant faithful humans endless life in Paradise on earth, where they can examine his handiwork for an eternity and thus gain true knowledge. David, who felt a reverential awe when viewing the heavens, also wrote that "the meek ones themselves will possess the earth, and they will indeed find their exquisite delight in the abundance of peace."(Ps 37:11)
 
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Some scientist recently spent their precious "alotment" of Hubble time concetrating on an apparently "empty spot" in space. What they found was aptly named the Ultra Deep Space Field which had 10,000 detectable galaxies each containing millions of stars- wow!
So how big is the universe? As we understand it the universe is an endless thing. If it does end what do you find after that?:shock:
God is great and does things in a big way to show His glory. Yet as big as the universe is it cannot contain Him.
 
In past few years, theories on the universe and it's structure have been revised. For example, in 1998, researchers analyzing light from a special kind of supernova or exploding star, found evidence that the expansion of the universe is accelerating ! The supernovas or exploding stars are called type 1a supernovas and they may shine as brightly as a billion suns for a short time. Astronomers use these supernovas as a standard for measurement.

At first, the scientists were skeptical that the expansion of the universe is accelerating, but the evidence soon mounted. Naturally, they wanted to know what form of energy was causing the accelerating expansion. For one thing, it seemed to be working in opposition to gravity; and for another, it was not predicted by present theories. Appropriately, this mysterious form of energy has been named dark energy, and it may make up nearly 75 percent of the universe !

Dark energy, however, is not the only "dark" oddity discovered in recent times. Another was confirmed in the 1980's when astronomers examined various galaxies. These galaxies, as well as our own, appears to be spinning too fast to hold together. Evidently, then, some form of matter must be giving them the necessary gravitational cohesion. But what kind of matter ? Because scientists have no idea, they have called the stuff dark matter, since it does not absorb, emit, or reflect detectable amounts of radiation. How much dark matter is out there ? Calculations indicate that it could make up 22 percent or more of the mass of the universe.

Consider this: According to current estimates, normal matter accounts for about 4 percent of the mass of the universe. The two big unknowns - dark matter and dark energy - appear to make up the balance. Thus, about 95 percent of the universe remains a complete mystery ! Dark matter was postulated in the 1930's and confirmed in the 1980's. Today astronomers measure how much dark matter a cluster of galaxies may have by observing how the cluster bends light from more distant objects.
 
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