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Olber's paradox
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Olber's paradoxhas definition The puzzle of why the sky is dark at night. If the universe extends infinitely in space, as it might, then the accumulated light from an infinite number of distant stars should seemingly cause the sky to be bright at all times, whether our sun is visible or not. This paradox, first posed in the eighteenth century, has been resolved by the big bang theory. In a universe with a beginning, we can receive light only from that part of the universe close enough so that light has had time to travel from there to here since the big bang (about 10 billion years ago). Thus, even if space extends infinitely far, only a limited region, and a limited number of stars, are visible to us. And the accumulated light from this limited number of stars is not sufficient to spoil the darkness of the night sky.has source: Lightman, A., Brawer, R. 1990 The Lives and Worlds of Modern Cosmologists, Harvard University Press, 2001-09-27 09:34:06.0
has definition A paradox formulated by the German astronomer Heinrich Olbers in 1826: Why is the sky dark at night? The amount of light we receive from a star decreases as the square of the distance from us. On the other hand, if we assume a uniform distribution of stars in space, the number of stars increases as the square of their distance from us, so the two factors should cancel out. In theory, then, the night sky should be a blazing mass of light, and obviously it is not. This self-contradictory statement is Olbers' paradox. In seeking to resolve it, astronomers noted that, besides the assumption of uniformity or homogeneity, Olbers made four other assumptions: (1) space is Euclidean; (2) the laws of physics that apply on Earth apply to the Universe as a whole; (3) the Universe is static (i.e., neither expanding nor contracting); (4) the Universe is spatially and temporally infinite. It is now known that all four of these assumptions are either incorrect or inaccurate.has source: Hopkins, J. 1976 Glossary of Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of Chicago Press, 2001-09-27 09:34:06.0
has definition A paradox formulated by the German astronomer Heinrich Olbers in 1826 that can be traced back to the writings of others, such as de Cheseaux, a century or more earlier. The paradox is: Why is the sky dark at night, if the universe is infinite? We now know that several of the assumptions made by Olbers (explicitly or implicitly) are incorrect.has source: Silk, J. 1990 The Big Bang, W. H. Publishers, New York, 2001-09-27 09:34:06.0
is an instance of paradox2001-09-27 09:34:06.0