Talk:Deceleration parameter
Hubble factor business
This business of the Hubble factor still decreasing needs some explanation. What I came to realize is that a, as the scale factor, determines whether there is an acceleration or not. Beynod that, the Hubble factor will decrease even with q=0 since as the universe gets bigger the galaxies moving away at a given rate get farther away. Hence the decrease. That the Hubble factor is still decreasing indicates that this is not a rapid expansion. In any case, some explanation of this is needed in the article. --EMS | Talk 04:04, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
- Okay, I've rewritten q as:
- Which shows independence of the sign of q from the sign of H. --Michael C. Price talk 09:34, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
- All that you have done is to confuse things even more. For a reader,
- What is the Hubble parameter?
- How can it be decreasing when the universe's expansion is accelerating?
- What is the significance of its decreasing while the expansion is accelerating?
- These issues need to be answered with a well thought-out write-up, not by throwing another equation at the reader. I took that business out of the general relativity article because it was more confusing than informative given the issues that it raised. I can accept it here, but only if the issues are dealt with. --EMS | Talk 18:12, 12 August 2006 (UTC)
- All that you have done is to confuse things even more. For a reader,
Your first point completely baffles me. Have you looked the article itself, where the Hubble parameter is defined and wikilinked? What more of an explanation are you after? --Michael C. Price talk 18:21, 12 August 2006 (UTC)