Why is there no “center of the universe”?

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So I’ve been going through the dangerous rabbit hole of wondering how everything came to be and, obviously, the leading theory is the big bang theory. Where an infinitely dense spot of matter exploded and created every single thing in existence, including the ever-expanding universe. So, if the ever-expanding universe started expanding from an infinitely dense spot that exploded, wouldn’t that spot be the “center of the universe”, since it’s the starting point of said expansion?

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22 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Key ideas to add to your consideration.

Observable Universe is not the whole universe

A big bang does not have to be THE big bang.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Key ideas to add to your consideration.

Observable Universe is not the whole universe

A big bang does not have to be THE big bang.

Anonymous 0 Comments

> the leading theory is the big bang theory

The big bang theory doesn’t really explain “how everything came to be” – it merely explains how the universe has changed since a certain point in time. And I don’t think “leading theory” is strong enough – there aren’t really any serious alternatives, and it has copious amounts of supporting evidence.

> Where an infinitely dense spot of matter exploded

This is a misconception. The big bang theory describes how the universe has expanded and cooled since a point in time at which it was an extremely hot, dense, uniform “soup” of subatomic particles. If you extrapolate the equations even further back in time, you end up at a point where the entire universe was infinitely dense, but there are good reasons to believe that those equations can’t be extrapolated back that far. It’s not really clear that the idea of an “infinitely dense spot” is physically meaningful – certainly, in the past, whenever theories predicted that anything was infinite, they eventually turned out to be incomplete.

Anyway, we can only measure our position in the universe relative to other things in the universe. It’s not like there are some axes in the background telling us where zero is. On the largest scales, the universe looks essentially the same in all directions – there doesn’t appear to be any particular star or galaxy that everything revolves around. So there is no apparent “centre”.

Anonymous 0 Comments

> the leading theory is the big bang theory

The big bang theory doesn’t really explain “how everything came to be” – it merely explains how the universe has changed since a certain point in time. And I don’t think “leading theory” is strong enough – there aren’t really any serious alternatives, and it has copious amounts of supporting evidence.

> Where an infinitely dense spot of matter exploded

This is a misconception. The big bang theory describes how the universe has expanded and cooled since a point in time at which it was an extremely hot, dense, uniform “soup” of subatomic particles. If you extrapolate the equations even further back in time, you end up at a point where the entire universe was infinitely dense, but there are good reasons to believe that those equations can’t be extrapolated back that far. It’s not really clear that the idea of an “infinitely dense spot” is physically meaningful – certainly, in the past, whenever theories predicted that anything was infinite, they eventually turned out to be incomplete.

Anyway, we can only measure our position in the universe relative to other things in the universe. It’s not like there are some axes in the background telling us where zero is. On the largest scales, the universe looks essentially the same in all directions – there doesn’t appear to be any particular star or galaxy that everything revolves around. So there is no apparent “centre”.

Anonymous 0 Comments

the universe is getting bigger so

from your own pov other stars and everything is getting away from you

from the pow of other stars, everything is getting away from them

if you run it back in time every star will get closer to you and from the pov of other stars everything will get closer to them

in reality some stars may be getting close to us due to their galactic motion path but overal everything is getting away from everything else

Anonymous 0 Comments

the universe is getting bigger so

from your own pov other stars and everything is getting away from you

from the pow of other stars, everything is getting away from them

if you run it back in time every star will get closer to you and from the pov of other stars everything will get closer to them

in reality some stars may be getting close to us due to their galactic motion path but overal everything is getting away from everything else

Anonymous 0 Comments

You are misunderstanding nature of big bang singularity and expansion. It wasn’t infinitely small early universe, it was infinitely dense early universe.

Universe doesn’t have some hard border, best we can tell its infinitely large and always has been. But in the past everything was much closer to everything else right down to very early universe when vacuum of space wasn’t even a thing because everything was so close together, and very hot too, nuclear fusion type of environment.

Expansion of the universe is not increase of some border, because universe has no such thing. Its expansion of space between everything, uniformly, there is no center everything is expanding away from.

Anonymous 0 Comments

You are misunderstanding nature of big bang singularity and expansion. It wasn’t infinitely small early universe, it was infinitely dense early universe.

Universe doesn’t have some hard border, best we can tell its infinitely large and always has been. But in the past everything was much closer to everything else right down to very early universe when vacuum of space wasn’t even a thing because everything was so close together, and very hot too, nuclear fusion type of environment.

Expansion of the universe is not increase of some border, because universe has no such thing. Its expansion of space between everything, uniformly, there is no center everything is expanding away from.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The beginning of the universe is often described as an infinity dense point that then, over the next 14 billion years, expanded and continues to expand into what we see today. This is a simplification to make the concept easier to understand.

The reality is that it wasn’t a single infinitely desne point, but rather the beginning of the univers, as far as we can tell, was an infinity dense everything that happened everywhere all at once, and that everything has been expanding ever since.

There may be a center, there may not. We have a limit to how far we can see, which is what we call the observable universe. There is most likely even more galaxies past what we can see, but because we can’t see everything, there is no way for us to know where the center is or if a center even exists.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The beginning of the universe is often described as an infinity dense point that then, over the next 14 billion years, expanded and continues to expand into what we see today. This is a simplification to make the concept easier to understand.

The reality is that it wasn’t a single infinitely desne point, but rather the beginning of the univers, as far as we can tell, was an infinity dense everything that happened everywhere all at once, and that everything has been expanding ever since.

There may be a center, there may not. We have a limit to how far we can see, which is what we call the observable universe. There is most likely even more galaxies past what we can see, but because we can’t see everything, there is no way for us to know where the center is or if a center even exists.