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				Jul 14th, 2003, 10:54 PM
			
			
			
		
			
			       
				Universe 
 Chojin and Chimp - Open / Closed / FlatThese different descriptions concern the future of the Universe,
 particularly whether it will continue to expand forever.  The future
 of the Universe hinges upon its density---the denser the Universe is,
 the more powerful gravity is.  If the Universe is sufficiently dense,
 at some point in the (distant) future, the Universe will cease to
 expand and begin to contract.  This is termed a "closed" Universe.  In
 this case the Universe is also finite in size, though unbounded.  (Its
 geometry is, in fact, similar to the *surface* of a sphere.  One can
 walk an infinite distance on a sphere's surface, yet the surface of a
 sphere clearly has a finite area.)
 
 If the Universe is not sufficiently dense, then the expansion will
 continue forever.  This is termed an "open" Universe.  One often hears
 that such a Universe is also infinite in spatial extent.  This is
 possibly true; recent research suggests that it may be possible for
 the Universe to have a finite volume, yet expand forever.
 
 One can also imagine a Universe in which gravity and the expansion are
 exactly equal.  The Universe stops expanding only after an infinite
 amount of time.  This Universe is also (possibly) infinite in spatial
 extent and is termed a "flat" Universe, because the sum of the
 interior angles of a triangle sum to 180 degrees---just like in the
 plane or "flat" geometry one learns in (US) high school.  For an open
 Universe, the geometry is negatively curved so that the sum of the
 interior angles of a triangle is less than 180 degrees; in a closed
 Universe, the geometry is positively curved and the sum of the
 interior angles of a triangle is more than 180 degrees.
 
 The critical density that separates an open Universe from a closed
 Universe is 1.0E-29 g/cm^3.  (This is an average density; there are
 clearly places in the Universe more dense than this, e.g., you, the
 reader with a density of about 1 g/cm^3, but this density is to be
 interpreted as the density if all matter were spread uniformly
 throughout the Universe.)  Current observational data are able to
 account for about 10--30% of this value, suggesting that the Universe
 is open.  However, motivated by inflationary theory, many theorists
 predict that the actual density in the Universe is essentially equal
 to the critical density and that observers have not yet found all of
 the matter in the Universe.
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				__________________Normally, we do not so much look at things as overlook them.
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