Everyone knows the old hypothetical with the monkeys and the typewriters producing the complete works of Shakespeare. This is similar to that I guess.Suppose the Universe goes through a cycle of expansion and eventual collapse. Starts with a Big Bang and ends with a return to the point of origin. Every time the Universe is reborn the same galaxies, systems, stars, planets, and moons are formed. This goes on forever. Is it safe to assume that at some point the EXACT same civilization and history will occur? What if the same galaxies, stars, planets etc are not necessarily formed (but they could)? Can you say that eventually all of the same things will happen? TL;DR how many factors do these hypotheticals rely on? Could you take away all the monkeys with typewriters but one and still have the same result but taking longer?
2/7/2013 1:09:30 PM
Where is that neato story about humanity outgrowing fuel sources with a big computer.... then they combine their conciousness with the computer... then the universe ends... then begins again... etc?nvmnd... found it.The Last Questionhttp://filer.case.edu/dts8/thelastq.htm[Edited on February 7, 2013 at 1:18 PM. Reason : unrelated to your questions though]
2/7/2013 1:18:04 PM
2/7/2013 1:41:41 PM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/03/universe-expanding-spitzer-space-telescope-data_n_1937474.html
2/7/2013 1:43:46 PM
distance/time/distancethat is a unit of distance^2/timeI do not comprehend. What am i misreading here?
2/7/2013 1:54:49 PM
These wikipedia articles..."I miss the future, where brains flew through space, and everyone ate lasers"
2/7/2013 1:59:32 PM
2/7/2013 2:01:57 PM
but seriously, the universe isn't likely to end in a big crunch.
2/7/2013 2:06:01 PM
If the expansion/contraction occurs for eternity as described in the OP then every possibility will occur an infinite number of times, right?
2/7/2013 2:12:51 PM
Well, the universe will never contract, so no.But just look at quantum many-worlds interpretation. Basically, if you accept that (such that there never is any decoherence, collapsing of the wavefunction), then the existence of "our" universe is only defined by likelihood. The versions of the universe are infinite, and the ones that appear to make sense classically just outnumber the ones that don't.
2/7/2013 2:37:07 PM
No....nonono. I am not saying this is ACTUALLY how the Universe will end. This is a hypothetical question. Regardless, if the universe is reborn for eternity no matter how it dies, the question remains.
2/7/2013 2:46:23 PM
God damn infinite monkey theorem almost got me fired at my last job
2/7/2013 2:48:11 PM
2/7/2013 2:49:11 PM
^ yes I know.....edit: think of each point 3 million light-years apart with the rate of expansion increasing by 46 miles per second every successive point[Edited on February 7, 2013 at 2:55 PM. Reason : .]
2/7/2013 2:50:18 PM
so what did you mean by that?did you mean that after every distance of 3 mil LY, the expansion rate increases by 46mi/s? if so, starting from where, the center of the universe? i guess that kinda makes sense.but that also means that for a distance of 3 mil LY, the expansion rate is constant, and then for the next 3 mil LY chunk, the rate is suddenly different, and so on. that is weird.[Edited on February 7, 2013 at 2:53 PM. Reason : ]
2/7/2013 2:52:17 PM
2/7/2013 2:53:56 PM
Any view of infinity is ho-hum by comparison of the "real" thing.I see your point though. I tried to edit the original post but it has already been 30min
2/7/2013 2:59:18 PM
I'm a fifth-year math grad student specializing in probability. And just to weigh in with my nerdy opinion...
2/7/2013 8:20:20 PM
Eternity is like, a long time.
2/7/2013 8:25:55 PM
^^yes/lolalso
2/7/2013 8:27:45 PM
2/7/2013 8:35:54 PM
distance/(time/distance)that is a unit of distance^2/time(distance/time)/distancethat is a unit of 1/time
2/7/2013 10:05:49 PM
right. the SI units of the Hubble Constant are s^-1multiply the Hubble Constant by km/megaparsec, take the reciprocal and you're left with the age of the universe in seconds.1 megaparsec is 3.086×10^19 km(74.3 km/s/Mpc) * (3.086×10^19 km/Mpc) = 2.408×10^-18 per second1/(2.408×10^-18 per second) = 4.152 × 10^17 seconds(4.152 x 10^17 seconds)/((60s/min)*(60min/hr)*(24hr/day)*(365.25day/year))= 13,156,894,060 yearsTA-DA![Edited on February 7, 2013 at 10:28 PM. Reason : way better than the state game]
2/7/2013 10:27:38 PM
TA-DA!!!!
2/7/2013 11:17:23 PM
It's completely counter intuitive and mind blowing that the universe is expanding at the seams. No religion ever has come close to capturing how amazing the world really is. But regarding the original post, I don't think thingsRecreate the same way each time. When things crunch back, they exist in quantum states that you can't predict exactly how they will reexpand from.
2/7/2013 11:43:17 PM
Maybe I should create a different hypothetical in which time is reset at the dawn of the human race an infinite number of times (or maybe not). Forget about quantum states and the rules of physics for a minute. This is strictly a mathematical question, even though I do enjoy all the discussion about cosmology and astrophysics.
2/8/2013 12:02:40 AM
2/8/2013 12:10:54 AM
2/8/2013 12:22:49 AM
technically 1/s is the SI unit for frequency...Hz, and is defined as the number of cycles per second of some periodic phenomenon. it isn't useful to think of the hubble constant in terms of cycles per second, at least not that i'm smart enough to think up (but i'm no cosmologist, so...)It's useful to think of the Hubble Constant in terms of (km/s)/Mpc, as already described, when thinking about the expansion of the universe. It's useful to think of it in terms of 1/s when thinking about the age of the universe.By the way, the cosmological constant is something totally different from the Hubble Constant and hasn't been discussed in this thread yet.[Edited on February 8, 2013 at 9:56 AM. Reason : l]
2/8/2013 9:54:10 AM
2/8/2013 2:55:03 PM
Yeah I don't see the point in having an infinite number of monkeys. Also, what if the monkey just presses the Q key for all eternity? He could have OCD.
2/8/2013 2:58:01 PM
2/8/2013 3:46:34 PM
2/11/2013 8:27:28 PM