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by posterboy
3221 days ago
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... have what right exactly? Pictures (i.e. measurements) of faint celestal bodies are but mushy wish-washed smears of a point is what I'm talking about for example. Quite simply, our band-width is limited by position, the ammount that we can observe is likely just a tiny fraction, the known universe only accounts for ca. 10% of theoretical total energy. In that sense the low energies are likely lost on us, then we actually see through a highpass (redshift?). |
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I remember thinking about this in 2011/2012 when it wasn't known (IIRC there was a bet over a bottle of wine between two physicists over this matter). But years later, because a satellite "zoomed out" far enough and sent images back to earth, physicists confirmed that it is very likely that the observable universe is not a fractal (i.e. it's Hausdorff-Besikovitch dimension, which is calculated from measurements, is fractional).