There are some galaxies moving away from us and some towards us. They are moving at incredible speeds relative to us. Because of this large relative difference, wouldn’t we experience time dilation when looking through the telescope to those distant galaxies? Something like a fast forward and seeing the galaxy rotate fast enough in a human life because we must be traveling close to the speed of light compared to them
u/AskedSuperior
Imagine we have some define volume A. Assume A is just an arbitrary volume chosen somewhere in the universe.
To fully describe A, how much information would this be? I’m not looking for a specific number but idea of what it would be. And I mean fully know the complete state of it, in an omniscient way down to what is possible. Following the uncertainty principle and all.
For example, is it as simple as just knowing x amount of scalar values per fundamental particle contained in A?
I had been thinking about this because it has implications in philosophy and omniscience. For example if it is not possible to contain the information of space in a space smaller than said space then this implies an omniscient being can exist in the universe it is omniscient of. Or else a paradox occurs.