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Scientific paper
Feb 1955
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1955natur.175..382.&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 175, Issue 4452, pp. 382-383 (1955).
Other
1
Scientific paper
MB. GOLD'S statement is very clear, and those interested in cosmology will be very grateful to him for making it. Unfortunately, however, it only increases the uncertainty which has arisen regarding the actual implications of the theory with respect to the observable horizon, since it appears to be in direct conflict with statements made in the paper by Hoyle which Mr. Gold now cites as one of ``the original papers on the subject''. In that paper Hoyle says : ``Extragalactic nebulæ are continually passing out of the observable universe ... The oldest condensation within the observable universe ... has an age of about 1.5 × 1010 years''. If a nebula passes out of the observable universe there must have been a time when it was within it (that is, was observable), and a later time when it was not observable. Hence there must have been a time when it ceased to be observable. But Mr. Gold now says : ``Is there a last moment for the reception of light signals from another galaxy ? No. There is no last moment of reception defined in the theory''.
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