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Drink15 t1_jdsqnxc wrote

If you stand in the corner of a room, are you at the center of what you can see?

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sarcastic_patriot t1_jdt03ze wrote

Except there's no corner of the universe that we know of. Observable universe is everything we can see from Earth, so each place in the universe has its own observable universe, which may or may not even include Earth.

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Wellfooled t1_jdum3n4 wrote

I'm just a layman, but I sympathize with this counter-shower thought. There are things in space that block our view--dark nebulas or even just normal stars preventing us from seeing what's directly behind them. Likewise gravitational lensing occasionally let's us see further than we would normally. The "observable" universe in that sense isn't a perfect sphere with Earth in the middle.

The "center" of the weird shape of the observable universe would be elsewhere. Of course how we could ever settle on the center of an area like that is beyond me.

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NLwino t1_jdunh7u wrote

>The word observable in this sense does not refer to the capability of modern technology to detect light or other information from an object, or whether there is anything to be detected. It refers to the physical limit created by the speed of light itself.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Observable_universe

You are always at the center of YOUR observable universe. If it's correct that the universe is isotropic.

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Drink15 t1_jdwpor8 wrote

You missed the point. As did many other people. The space you are in has a center point independent of where the observer is located.

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