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No_Masterpiece6568 t1_iue4qz7 wrote

You have a misconception in your understanding of the expansion of space. All space is expanding but at different rates according to how far away from us the observed object is. So for instance, the space between us and the sun is expanding, but at a much slower rate than the rate between us and distant objects. Distant objects have more space between us and them, and therefore more rapid expansion. The only limit to our observations is the resolution of our telescopes. Even galaxies that formed just after the Big Bang are observable, but because they are so far away their light has been red shifted into the infrared, and therefore we need an infrared telescope to observe them (hence the Spitzer telescope, which will make observations right up to the Big Bang event).

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Tatti_luck OP t1_iugbqmq wrote

So even our current telescopes have a limitation and the most we can see is till the BB. Then how do we know that there is something beyond the horizon? Shouldn’t our view be limited to 14 billion years in radius?

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