Okay, I apologize in advance for asking what must be a rather obvious question to everyone out there, but...
Suppose that the age of the universe is 14BY and the most distant object we can see is 13B lightyears away (I picked these because they seem to be close to the actual values while still being round numbers). This means we're looking at an object as it was when the universe were only 1B years.
But it seems like the most distant we could have been from the object at that time is just under 2B lightyears. So how is it that it took 11B years for the light to reach us?
The only explanation I can think of is that the expansion rate of the universe is really high so it really did take 11B years for the light to reach us. I can't think of a reason for the expansion speed to not be this except that it just "sounds" obscenely fast. I guess the expansion speed would show up in the red shift, and I know we judge how far something is by how red shifted it is. Is the red-shift in this case high enough to suggest a speed which seems like it'd be in the upper quartile of c?
Can someone fill in this missing piece here, or did I essentially answer my own question?
Suppose that the age of the universe is 14BY and the most distant object we can see is 13B lightyears away (I picked these because they seem to be close to the actual values while still being round numbers). This means we're looking at an object as it was when the universe were only 1B years.
But it seems like the most distant we could have been from the object at that time is just under 2B lightyears. So how is it that it took 11B years for the light to reach us?
The only explanation I can think of is that the expansion rate of the universe is really high so it really did take 11B years for the light to reach us. I can't think of a reason for the expansion speed to not be this except that it just "sounds" obscenely fast. I guess the expansion speed would show up in the red shift, and I know we judge how far something is by how red shifted it is. Is the red-shift in this case high enough to suggest a speed which seems like it'd be in the upper quartile of c?
Can someone fill in this missing piece here, or did I essentially answer my own question?