The Void

Let's theorize. We have been able to find only one of these places so far. It is said that there is absolutely nothing. There are no stars, planets, objects, Dark Matter or anything that could emit any sort of light or radiation. What if this Void is that place with a temperature of absolute zero?

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KBC_Void
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

Oh I think we've found a void alright, right in your head.

>>What if this Void is that place with a temperature of absolute zero?
it ain't. Because of the cosmic background radiation space can't be absolute zero.

Although this is a little far fetched it could be possible that there is a large pocket of space-time that is stretching at a rate that is much faster than the rest of space-time. So fast that this localized pocket would be accelerating FTL and therefore no light from the other side would be able to reach us.

Just a plausible, although improbable, idea.

What about outside our Universe, would there be a true void out there where it is absolute zero?

no, virtual particles

Why would those exist outside of universe?

Why would either of you speculate about an outside to the universe let alone what it could contain?

Why not? There's no reason to not speculate about something you aren't familiar with.

>Why not?
Same reason you dont wonder what you looked like before your parents were born.
We lack any context or frame of reference by which to make even tenuous suggestions. Also everything we know is based on the laws that govern the universe. By definition a region outside of the universe wouldn't be bound by our laws and conditions.
So yes, you can speculate, but without any way of testing that you're just taking wild shots in the dark and Eris and the Flying Spaghetti Monster might just be out there fucking like rabits and birthing Chthulu's by the litter.

>Let's theorize.
Lrn2speculate fgt pls

>Let's theorize
Nah.
t. engineer

Our universe for one, so it shouldn't be that much different.

The universe contains everything by definition.
Consider the outside of the universe to exist.
If the outside of the universe exists, then it must be part of everything.
Thus, the outside of the universe is part of the universe.
Proof by contradiction. The outside of the universe cannot exist.

>It is said that there is absolutely nothing

Nature does not have voids.

>What if this Void is that place with a temperature of absolute zero?

That can't exist in nature. If you read 0k then it merely means your instrument isn't fine enough to read it.

>What about outside our Universe

There is no, "outside." Imagine the OP image expanded to be literally everywhere.

>The universe is an infinite 3D space structured via entropic forces, looking much like a larger version of galactic filaments, where some areas are expanding, (like ours,) and other areas are contracting, (like areas near the currently observable universe.)

Temperatre is net kinetic energy of matter in a given volume, if a given volume has no matter then it has no temperature. That doesn't mean that the temperature is below -460F, it means that there simply is no value.

There is nothing outside our universe. That doesn't mean empty space, that means literally nothing.
The universe is everything. The only spaces that exist outside of it are simply past and preaent states that are truly just the same universe but in a different form or with different contents. To say that space or time exist outside the universe calls for a redefining of the word universe and invalidates the statement.

I like hamburgers.

Through Cosmic Background Radiation we can see the effects of cosmic inflation , which basically means that the quantum fluctuations of virtual particles were affected by Big Bang’s explosion ; following this logic, virtual particles already existed before the Big Bang, so a place outside our universe would still contain virtual particles

the word "universe" has taken some hits in recent decades though, with talk of alternate and parallel universes, both in physical senses and weird quantum senses

>Birthing Cthulhus by the litter
One can only hope.

Let's time this was discussed here, someone posted a link that said we, and probably our local group, were in the middle of one of the voids.

Yup, here it is.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KBC_Void
>is an immense, comparatively empty region of space that contains the Milky Way itself, the Local Group and much of the Laniakea Supercluster. This void is roughly spherical, approximately 2 billion light years (600 megaparsecs) in diameter, with the Milky Way within a few hundred million light years of its centre.[2] The KBC void is the largest supervoid known to science.

Outside the universe there is only a googolplex of lions, trying to claw their way into ours.

>contains the Milky Way itself, the Local Group and much of the Laniakea Supercluster

Whoever named it a Void was having a laugh.

Do you write doujins? You should write doujins.

It's about density, not quantity.

I hear ya. I entertain that stuff but I'm still not sure that's how it works. Multiple universes are still discretely separated and while it may be theorized that there would be some emergent properties of some multiverse or overlapping bubble galaxies but I've always seen it laid out that each observed universe behaves pretty similarly as an exclusive unit.

It ain't empty though, far from it. Thar be entire galaxies in them thar voids

>There is no, "outside." Imagine the OP image expanded to be literally everywhere.
Probably not true

How about the eridanus supervoid?

Yeah, they were fucking dense.

Get off this board normie.

7/10 was pretty fun but artsy