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grumpyduck

(6,650 posts)
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 03:43 PM Feb 2023

Question for astronomy buffs.

Like probably many of us, I often ponder weird stuff in the shower. Most of it just comes and goes, but this thought, from a few days ago, kinda stuck in there.

We are told that the vast majority of the objects we see in the sky are anywhere from a few to several million lights-years away, i.e., at different distances. So what we see up there is the light from where these objects were a long time ago. And the universe is expanding.

So, it would seem to follow that what we see up there isn't a "real" picture: it's more like a composite picture of where all these objects were (in our viewpoint) at many different times in the past. For all we know, the constellations, as we see them, may not even "exist" any more. And that supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way may be a lot bigger.

And that leads to the other thought: when we see a planet, we are seeing where it was when sunlight hit it, but it's not there "now," because the light from the planet takes a while to reach us.

Did all that hot water screw up my brain?

12 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Question for astronomy buffs. (Original Post) grumpyduck Feb 2023 OP
mind blowing, isn't it! NewHendoLib Feb 2023 #1
Yep! happybird Feb 2023 #2
Not related to your astronomy question but.... yonder Feb 2023 #3
Somewhat common event. Irish_Dem Feb 2023 #5
No worries. grumpyduck Feb 2023 #8
Yes we are actually viewing the past? Irish_Dem Feb 2023 #4
Yep. Beastly Boy Feb 2023 #6
That weird stuff in the shower is easily removed with spray on bleach and a brush. LastDemocratInSC Feb 2023 #7
Well, a lot of it has to do with our view of distance tornado34jh Feb 2023 #9
Try taking a bath. Worked for Archimedes. usonian Feb 2023 #10
I don't think I'd want to run naked down the street grumpyduck Feb 2023 #11
Try reading up on the topic of "light cone" (actually a 4-D hypercone) eppur_se_muova Feb 2023 #12

NewHendoLib

(60,501 posts)
1. mind blowing, isn't it!
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 03:49 PM
Feb 2023

the fact that light takes time to travel makes it all fascinating - just learned that light takes about 45 min to reach us from Jupiter, varying as Jupiter's distance from us varies. So - if Jupiter blows up, we wouldn't know for 45 min - but that's based on our perspective. I guess, anyway!

happybird

(5,116 posts)
2. Yep!
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 04:07 PM
Feb 2023

With the planets in our solar system we are seeing them as they were minutes ago since they are relatively close. When you look at the Sun, what you see was 8 minutes ago. I used to have a sky-viewing app on my old iPad that included the times for each object. It blew my mind! Learning that shut my brain down for a bit while I processed the information and eventually came to understand it. Crazy! Sadly, I can’t remember which app it was.

yonder

(10,002 posts)
3. Not related to your astronomy question but....
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 04:54 PM
Feb 2023

...I've often wondered why "I often ponder weird stuff in the shower" too.

I seem to do my best free form, stream of consciousness thinking during those few moments and don't know why that is.

I apologize in advance for jostling your thread.

Irish_Dem

(57,527 posts)
5. Somewhat common event.
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 05:12 PM
Feb 2023

We aren't sure why.

Shower provides relaxation/meditation/endorphin release?

Beastly Boy

(11,137 posts)
6. Yep.
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 05:33 PM
Feb 2023

So if you see something you like on Jupiter, grab it right away: it may not be there 45 minutes ago...

That makes sense, doesn't it?

tornado34jh

(1,294 posts)
9. Well, a lot of it has to do with our view of distance
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 08:02 PM
Feb 2023

Our brains have a hard time with distance. If you were to look up at the sky and see a plane moving, it appears to be moving slowly, when in fact, it is moving at several hundred miles per hour. Obviously if it were close to the ground at that speed, it would appear very fast. But when it is say 40,000 feet up, it's not moving much, and so it appears far away. Now take that and go at a much bigger scale. The stars in the constellations all appear to be the same, when in fact they are not. If we were to take a spaceship and go to each star, they would appear at different distances. In effect, we sort of see a "2D" appearance in the night sky even though it isn't.

But how bright it is doesn't necessarily tell us how far away it is. For example, Deneb, in the constellation of Cygnus, is about as bright as Saturn is at minimum apparent magnitude, but Saturn is about 1 billion miles away, while Deneb is anywhere between 1,500-3,000 light years away. But the reason it is that bright despite being that far away is because it is white supergiant. It is between 55,000 and 196,000 times as luminous as the sun. If it were say 33 light years away, it would be as bright as a quarter moon. Space is so vast, it's hard for most of us to comprehend.

grumpyduck

(6,650 posts)
11. I don't think I'd want to run naked down the street
Tue Feb 7, 2023, 11:02 PM
Feb 2023

crying "I found it!"

But thanks for the thought.

eppur_se_muova

(37,403 posts)
12. Try reading up on the topic of "light cone" (actually a 4-D hypercone)
Wed Feb 8, 2023, 11:07 AM
Feb 2023
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_cone

Anything outside your past light cone is invisible to you. Anything outside your future light cone cannot affect you -- its worldline and yours never intersect.
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