I have often wondered where the center of the universe is.
If you attempt to search this on the internet you get the same lame quack answer, nowhere and everywhere.
Read that...it's the canned answer pretty much:
http://www.faqs.org/faqs/astronomy/faq/part9/section-5.htmlI don't buy it. Surface of a balloon?
If the BBT is correct then:
From the singularity everything expanded outward. That means there is an outer shell of expansion, all the way through our universal radius to the center point where the singularity began growing from.
Even if everything is moving away from everything else...blah blah blah...then if our galaxy was 60 percent out from the center of the singularity then it should be so now and there should be a center point.
What about that idiotic balloon surface theory, which is stupid because i'm fairly certain everything in our universe is not on the surface of some expanding sphere. Even if you were to consider this you would have to agree that the surface is equally moving away from a common center point.
If we reversed the expansion of our universe in FFW we would, at the final moments, be able to easily see that we are, on OUR side of the center, moving in a definite direction towards the center with all of our neighbors, and that, on the other side of the center there are a great number of objects converging on the same point.
I imagine the only viable argument is that in order for there to be a center to our universe there has to be something for our universe to reside in, in order to form the three dimensional expanding universal sphere that has an outer expanding shell and a center to expand from.
Why don't they ever say, "We just don't meddling know," instead of making up excrement, convincing everyone its true. We are no surface of a balloon, I know that much.
teehee