RE: The universe appears "old", but it is still less than 10,000 years old
November 27, 2013 at 11:26 am
(This post was last modified: November 27, 2013 at 11:33 am by Optimistic Mysanthrope.)
orogenicman ' Wrote: Most certainly it can. Any measure of the speed of light, be it one-way, or two-way, that involves a fraction of a fraction of a percent difference in measurement is never going to give you a result that is any closer to a 10,000 year old universe than the currently known standard speed of light in a vacuum. Since the difference will always be a fraction of a fraction of a difference, + or -, you are still going to have a result that approximates 299,792,458 m / s. Given the distance to the most distant object known using current light measurements, you will never get a result that will give you a 10,000 year old universe, no matter how much special pleading you do. why? Because it will never change the standard candle enough to make such a significant difference between what we know it to be, and what the warped one wants it to be.
(November 27, 2013 at 8:56 am)Optimistic Mysanthrope Wrote: That's true, but the time between emission and detection would still be an exact match to that caused by positional time dilation predicted by an anisotropic convention Using that kind of experiment, you have to assume the very convention you are trying to prove - the results are meaningless.
I'm having to use my phone at the moment, I'll read the articles when I get a chance.