Truely universal time and distance

Some news supporting my assertions about constants not being really constant:

http://www.economist.com/node/16930866

RICHARD FEYNMAN, Nobel laureate and physicist extraordinaire, called it a “magic number” and its value “one of the greatest damn mysteries of physics”. The number he was referring to, which goes by the symbol alpha and the rather more long-winded name of the fine-structure constant, is magic indeed. If it were a mere 4% bigger or smaller than it is, stars would not be able to sustain the nuclear reactions that synthesise carbon and oxygen. One consequence would be that squishy, carbon-based life would not exist.

Why alpha takes on the precise value it has, so delicately fine-tuned for life, is a deep scientific mystery. A new piece of astrophysical research may, however, have uncovered a crucial piece of the puzzle. In a paper just submitted to Physical Review Letters, a team led by John Webb and Julian King from the University of New South Wales in Australia present evidence that the fine-structure constant may not actually be constant after all. Rather, it seems to vary from place to place within the universe. If their results hold up to the scrutiny, and can be replicated, they will have profound implications—for they suggest that the universe stretches far beyond what telescopes can observe, and that the laws of physics vary within it. Instead of the whole universe being fine-tuned for life, then, humanity finds itself in a corner of space where, Goldilocks-like, the values of the fundamental constants happen to be just right for it.
 
Some discussion has come up over alpha varying over time with some research into radioactive deposits and their isotope compositions.

In the context of this thread, this latest research, if someday confirmed, would put a ceiling on the error bars of our universal time constant. If we want to communicate to aliens a time unit, we only need to worry about those that can exist. Any regions where alpha is more than a few percent off would not have stellar systems to support them.
If anything could live in this kind of Outer Darkness, I think the novels on the consequences of dealing with such entities would indicate we may not want to talk to those.

Given the graduality of the shift, if confirmed, it is actually quite likely that an alien race we would most likely encounter would have a very close value, and we could discuss the parts per million error when we got to talking.
 
Why alpha takes on the precise value it has, so delicately fine-tuned for life, is a deep scientific mystery.
Self-serving argument and logical fallacy...

In any case, I'm pretty sure spectral lines of carbon, oxygen and even heavier elements have shown up in every survey of every galaxy ever made, or else it would have been Pretty Big News.

Edit:
Speaking of which, check out the Hubble telescope shot on this page (the article itself is also pretty damn interesting, so make sure to take a few mins of your time to read it): http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/b...me-death-spiral-of-a-bizarre-star/#more-20567

Note that there are more GALAXIES than individual stars visible in that shot! Pretty f'n crazy if I may say so!

The universe sure is a mind-boggling place...
 
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