On Sat, Jun 7, 2025 at 1:59 AM Alan Grayson <agrayson2...@gmail.com> wrote:

*> My problem is this; the light from distant galaxies is highly
> red-shifted, indicating a huge recessional velocity, but at a much earlier
> time.*
>


*No. The James Webb telescope recently found a galaxy that had a red shift
of 14.44, from that number astronomers calculate that it took light 13.5
billion years to reach us, so we're observing how that galaxy looked 13.5
billion years ago. However during that 13.5 billion years the universe has
not only been expanding it's been accelerating, so back then the universe
was expanding slower not faster than it is now. Today that galaxy is not
13.5 billion light years from us, it is 34.7 billion light years from us.
Even if we could travel at the speed of light we could never reach that
galaxy in a finite number of years, and any galaxy that has a red shift
greater than 1.8 is forever out of our reach.*

*John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*
q19

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