Comment Re:Got some questions (Score 4, Interesting) 37
Wouldn't you have to be on the very edge of the universe to feel ancient gravitational waves? It's not like they bounce like sound waves.
There is no edge, every point is at the precise center including your two eyes. Because light, gravity waves, and causality travel at a single fixed speed, the further something is the farther back in time it is until you reach a point where you cannot see beyond because it is too far back in time and approaches the Big Bang. Gravity waves from the Big Bang will be rippling through all points always just as you can look in any direction and see the microwave background which is the Big Bang but stretched out to the point it’s far cooler and of longer wavelengths.
And don't they dissipate the further they get from the source, making them undetectable?
Gravity waves are fundamentally undetectable, even in principle. If you want a nearly exact example you are probably familiar with think of two floating bits on a still lake. Perception only occurs along the surface of the water, they cannot see or measure or perceive up and down. When a ripple passes the two bits move toward and away from each other as the surface stretches and shrinks to accommodate the wave and that is the distortion that is measured not the wave itself. It boils down to the second derivative of the mass quadrupole moment tensor and it falls off linearly with distance so is not like other directly measured waves that fall off exponentially.
And how does this explain the ridiculous notion that matter traveled faster than the speed of light shortly after the big bang?
The universe is the same everywhere at the largest scales including being at the exact temperature despite not being casually connected if you look at how causality works on our scales, times, and energy levels. The most reasonable thing is that the universe was once all touching in close contact, even points 90 billion light years away from each other. The universe is also expanding the same everywhere on the largest scales so if you rewind time everything goes back to one point even if there isn’t a “center”. So the crazy thing is to look at all the evidence for it (many other examples of measurement also confirm this is how it looks) and say it’s all wrong because it does not meet personal expectations. That’s not how science works.