Ever have on of those questions that you know has a simple answer, yet for some stupid reason you just can't visualise it in your mind...
The Microwave background radiation of the universe has been mapped, and forms a picture of the early universe relatively soon after the big bang when radiation was released. I get that much. And as light travels at the speed of light, the further away the 'source' of light, the further back in time we're looking. No problems there.
I guess I'm visualising this the wrong way (and, oddly, even as I write this I can nearly grasp it, but need comformation). But imagining the universe as 'compact' and then expanding - keeping in mind it's spacetime that is expanding and not the universe getting bigger in a larger medium - I picture seeing that initial burst of radiation moving away at the speed of light. To see it, wouldn't it need to somehow reflect back? I know it seems ridiculous, but I'm imagining there needing to be something that radiation reflects off so we can then see it.
What am I not getting?
Athon
The Microwave background radiation of the universe has been mapped, and forms a picture of the early universe relatively soon after the big bang when radiation was released. I get that much. And as light travels at the speed of light, the further away the 'source' of light, the further back in time we're looking. No problems there.
I guess I'm visualising this the wrong way (and, oddly, even as I write this I can nearly grasp it, but need comformation). But imagining the universe as 'compact' and then expanding - keeping in mind it's spacetime that is expanding and not the universe getting bigger in a larger medium - I picture seeing that initial burst of radiation moving away at the speed of light. To see it, wouldn't it need to somehow reflect back? I know it seems ridiculous, but I'm imagining there needing to be something that radiation reflects off so we can then see it.
What am I not getting?
Athon