Posted on 09/14/2009 4:04:35 AM PDT by decimon
Remember a little thing called the space-time continuum? Well what if the time part of the equation was literally running out? New evidence is suggesting that time is slowly disappearing from our universe, and will one day vanish completely. This radical new theory may explain a cosmological mystery that has baffled scientists for years.
Scientists previously have measured the light from distant exploding stars to show that the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate. They assumed that these supernovae are spreading apart faster as the universe ages. Physicists also assumed that a kind of anti-gravitational force must be driving the galaxies apart, and started to call this unidentified force "dark energy".
However, to this day no one actually knows what dark energy is, or where it comes from. Professor Jose Senovilla, and his colleagues at the University of the Basque Country in Bilbao, Spain, have proposed a mind-bending alternative. They propose that there is no such thing as dark energy at all, and were looking at things backwards. Senovilla proposes that we have been fooled into thinking the expansion of the universe is accelerating, when in reality, time itself is slowing down. At an everyday level, the change would not be perceptible. However, it would be obvious from cosmic scale measurements tracking the course of the universe over billions of years. The change would be infinitesimally slow from a human perspective, but in terms of the vast perspective of cosmology, the study of ancient light from suns that shone billions of years ago, it could easily be measured
The team's proposal, which will be published in the journal Physical Review D, dismisses dark energy as fiction. Instead, Prof Senovilla says, the appearance of acceleration is caused by time itself gradually slowing down, like a clock with a run-down battery.
(Excerpt) Read more at dailygalaxy.com ...
brings to mind the Langoliers...
Every time you post, it’s a toast to that Freeper.
As a time traveler myself, I can tell you that time is definitely vanishing.
My biggest complaint about my time travel is that I travel through time at the rate of one hour per hour.
Now I know why I don't have the time to do all of that house-work the wife wants me to do!
From the collected works of Sir Francis Bologna, I’m sure...
Haiku is coo
Coo, coo, coo
Three is too
That sounds like a very inefficient time machine =o)
We have plenty of past, and plenty of future. There is not nearly enough present. It’s like, “Poof!,” it’s gone.
Time are round.
Yeah, gone in an instant. If there could be an instant. But that would mean time had stopped.
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