Quote from TM_Direct:
Amazing that we are able to tell the age of stars that are " light years away" and estimate they are 15 BILLION years old.....yet, right here on planet earth using carbon 14 and artifacts we can actually touch, we cannot tell how old the dinosaurs are and cannot tell if the shroud of turin dates back to Jesus or not....In the case of the shroud, your looking at about 2000 years...In the case of dinosaurs, there are some who feel they went extinct 65-100 million years ago and others who believe its only 20 million years ago......yet we are going to put a date on a star???? we conclude about other universes and a supposed 'expansion' because we see light radiating????? Im not saying its true or not...im saying....we don;t have a f-ing clue...but it is fun to ponder and debate.
If the Shroud of Turin was super-massive, giving off radiant energy, and moving through space relative to other points, we'd be able to measure its age give or take a few million years or so.
If you informed yourself a bit on how the measurements are made, you wouldn't find the whole thing so mystifying - overwhelming, maybe, when you consider the distances in space and time and the masses involved, and just the sheer number of stars, but not so mystifying or so easily dismissable on the technical level.
70 sextillion stars in 'known universe'
July 22, 2003 20:08 IST
Ever tried to count the number of stars on a clear night?
According to a study by a team of stargazers based at the Australian National University, there are 70,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (70,000 million million million, or 70 sextillion) stars in the known universe.
That is about 10 times more than the grains of sand on earth.
At the General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union meeting in Sydney, Dr Simon Driver, who headed the team, said the number was drawn up based on a survey of one strip of sky.
Within the strip of sky some 10,000 galaxies were pinpointed and their brightness was measured to figure out how many stars they contained.
That number was then multiplied by the number of similar sized strips needed to cover the entire sky, Dr Driver said, and then multiplied again out to the edge of the visible universe.
Two telescopes, one at the Anglo-Australian Observatory in northern New South Wales state and one in the Canary Islands, were used to carry out the survey.
According to him, it is likely that there are many more million stars, but 70 sextillion was the number visible within range of modern telescopes.
The universe is so big that light from the other end of the universe 'hasn't reached us yet', Australia's The Age newspaper quoted him as saying.
Asked if he believed there was other intelligent life out there, he said: "Seventy thousand million million million is a big number... it's inevitable."