roadrash
cycle chatterer
- Location
- sitting on the edge of wigan pier
Wrong, wrong, wrong!
The correct answer to this question is "What do you think I am, a blaaady astronomer?!" ...![]()
No, we think your ..... wonnie pickewing
Wrong, wrong, wrong!
The correct answer to this question is "What do you think I am, a blaaady astronomer?!" ...![]()
If I left him alone infront of the TV for four hours, he'd have the back off it and be salvaging units to use with his Raspberry PiJust stick him in front of Wonders of the Universe... that'll keep him quiet for at least 4 hours, after which, his skull will be filled with even more unanswerable questions
I like pie, is it a Mary Berry recipe he uses?If I left him alone infront of the TV for four hours, he'd have the back off it and be salvaging units to use with his Raspberry Pi
Is the answer n+1?Take the infinate number x, logically there must also be -x, negative infinity. This can be represented on number line joined to form a circle with 0 at 12 'o' clock and + and - infinity joined at 6 'o' clock. This 2d circle can represent an axis through the universe. As infinity is always x+1 the circle like the universe is ever expanding.
That's bikes, but same principle.Is the answer n+1?
Wouldn't be a bit annoying and embarrassing now if your name actually were Ronnie Pickering (a different one!) ...?No, we think your ..... wonnie pickewing
My daughter knitted me a Klein bottle hat. I look rather dashing in it.Klein Bottle ...... That will fool him
Shaun
At the risk lowering the tone, with serious answers there are at least two different things.
2 If space is finite - is it bounded ? This is the essence of the lad's question. The usual analogy is to look at a two dimensional space - a flat plane - infinite and unbounded, a dinner plate ', finite and bounded - and the ineresting one - surface of a sphere - finite, but unbounded. Any of these can be expanding or contracting - think of stretching the surface. The surface of a sphere is mathematically a 2 dimensional thing. 3 dimensional spaces can be considered in the same way, albeit harded to visualise
There are an infinite number of infinities of different sizes, as in the hotel @midlife mentions. The infinite universe is simply expanding into a space of a bigger infinity.So, my 12 year old son has just posed an interesting question....how can the universe be infinite if it is expanding? Answers on a postcard please, as I want to shut him up about it!
Fnarr!If he thinks that's difficult to understand, wait until he gets into women.
There are an infinite number of infinities of different sizes, as in the hotel @midlife mentions. The infinite universe is simply expanding into a space of a bigger infinity.
Fnarr!![]()