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Is it possible that things in the universe are shrinking rather than moving away from each other?

Hypothetically Let’s say everything lost 1% of its size/mass/energy every 12 months. From our perspective, because everything was shrinking we wouldn’t notice but if all of the objects were in a finite space it would appear that the objects were physically moving apart.

The smaller everything got the faster that expansion would seem to be happening. This seems a good explanation for the mystery of why the expansion of the universe appears to be accelerating against the known laws of physics.

Is it possible that things in the universe are shrinking rather than moving away from each other? Hypothetically Let’s say everything lost 1% of its size/mass/energy every 12 months. From our perspective, because everything was shrinking we wouldn’t notice but if all of the objects were in a finite space it would appear that the objects were physically moving apart. The smaller everything got the faster that expansion would seem to be happening. This seems a good explanation for the mystery of why the expansion of the universe appears to be accelerating against the known laws of physics.

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

The 1% figure was a number pulled out of my butt to use as an example.

I don’t mean if objects shed mass, I mean what if the mass actually shrinks at atomic levels?

We in the universe would not notice any difference in size because it would be relative to our own shrinkage.

To notice the difference you would need to be outside the observable universe looking in and what you would see is every object shrinking while staying stationary which would cause the distance between the objects to get bigger

We can measure the baryon acoustic oscillations formed in the CMB (cosmic microwave background) at the last moment of the cosmic dark ages, when the temperature of the universe finally fell below a threshold to allow atomic nuclei to capture electrons (recombination) and photons could travel freely. Basically an imprint left on the CMB, way back around 300k years after the "big bang."

We can measure the properties of baryons as they were when recombination occurred, and it tells us the particle masses haven't changed since then.

[–] 0 pt

Lol, that’s retarded. Some fag in a lab coat told you that and it sounded cool… so you instantly believed it.

So what do you believe, and who told you?