Jukia, was Krauss was right to say all evidence overwhelmingly supports the big bang?
Jukia, was Krauss was right to say all evidence overwhelmingly supports the big bang?
No thanks, can't even say "Nice try" because it is the same old tired nonsense from Pastor Bob and his followers.
Hi Jukia! Hey, I'm wondering if, of the dozens of evidences above, just considering the first four (which I'll paste again here),
do you think Lawrence Krauss is correct to say that all evidence overwhelmingly supports the big bang? I know it takes time, but if you would, please consider these four pieces of evidence, and then answer (if you would)...
* Mature galaxies exist where the BB predicts only infant galaxies: The Big Bang predicts that when telescopes peer especially far into outer space, they should see only infant galaxies. Instead, as we've been documenting for two decades, they are repeatedly "startled" and "baffled" (
per the journal Science) to see exactly what the Big Bang predicts should not exist. For many of the most distant ("youngest") galaxies look just like the Milky Way and the oldest galaxies all around us! Just in time for our 2014 RSR Big Bang program, the
Carnegie Observatories: "discovered 15 [more] massive, mature galaxies located where they shouldn't be: at an average distance of 12 billion light years away from Earth." Such
discoveries prove wrong Neil deGrasse Tyson claim last week that we creationists cannot not make predictions, as any glance at our
RSR Predictions and our
confirmed predictions shows. In 2005 a cover story for
Science News stated, "Imagine peering into a nursery and seeing, among the cooing babies, a few that look like grown men. That's the startling situation that astronomers have stumbled upon as they've looked deep into space and thus back to a time when newborn galaxies filled the cosmos. Some of these babies have turned out to be nearly as massive as the Milky Way and other galactic geezers that have taken billions of years to form." Finally, in 1995, as NASA was preparing to publish their first Hubble Deep Field Image, Bob Enyart predicted (as would all biblical creationists) that NASA and the entire Big Bang community of astronomers, physicists and astrophysicists, would all be wrong, because the furthest galaxies would look just like nearby galaxies regarding apparent age. Learn more
here,
here,
here,
here, and
here!
* Clusters of galaxies exist at great distances where the BB did not predict they would exist: Galaxy clusters typically have between 100 and 1,000 gravitationally bound galaxies. When astronomers began looking at the furthest galaxies, which must have been formed when the universe was young, they did not expect to find galaxies pulled together into clusters. But they did. "The surprising thing is that when we look closely at this galaxy cluster," said Raphael Gobat, lead author of an Astronomy & Astrophysics journal paper, "it doesn't look young..." The official Hubble website reports that its very old stars and galaxies, "makes the cluster a mature object,
similar in mass to the Virgo galaxy cluster..." The Virgo cluster is not 10 billion years away; it's so close to us that we're in it. The Virgo cluster contains 2,000 galaxies including the Milky Way. So finding a cluster with the mass and age of the Virgo cluster, more than 10 billion light years from the earth is more than "surprising"; it is another major failure of the Big Bang model's ability to predict the nature of the universe. And even further clusters will continue to be discovered. For the Jet Propulsion Lab had just previously announced discovery of another galaxy cluster comprising "400 billion suns" at a distance of "
12.6 billion light-years away from Earth."
* Galaxy superclusters exist yet the BB predicted that gravity couldn't form them in less than a trillion years: Enormous clusters, called
superclusters, contain about
90% of all galaxies and are made up of millions of galaxies. Astronomers find them shaped like
filaments and bubbles and in structures like the
Great Wall, and the
billion-light-year-long
Sloan Great Wall. Even at the alleged 13.8 billion years of age, the universe lacks 99% of the time required for gravity to pull these structures together. Thus because it would take a trillion years of work by gravity to pull together even the smaller superclusters, the "standard model" did not predict their existence. Thus if the Big Bang were true, superclusters should not exist. But they do. So to save their favored theory (and motivated by a desire to explain the cosmos apart from the Creator), theoreticians imagined a
BB rescue device: dark matter.
* Missing billions of years of additional clustering of nearby galaxies: As Princeton's astrophysics Prof. Michael Strauss
describes the data: "...tremendously distant galaxies are just as clustered as today [that is, as those that are nearby] and are arranged in the same filamentary, bubbly structures that nearby galaxies are." Thus, rescuing the Big Bang theory from the existence of unexpected distant galaxy clusters merely exposes an equal and opposite failure of the theory. If
96% of the stuff of the universe is hypothetical and unknown, but sufficient to rapidly pull together galaxy clusters from across the universe as they existed allegedly many billions of years ago, then
that same extra matter should have pulled together the mass of nearby galaxies far more so than it could have done in just the early stages of the universe to the most distant galaxies. At the home of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, CalTech's astronomy Prof. Charles Steidel
concurs with the degree of clustering, near and far: "The work is ongoing, but what we’re able to say now is that galaxies we are seeing at great distances are as strongly clustered in the early universe as they are today." This enormous observation fits the
predictions of young-earth creation but contradicts BB expectations.
So Jukia, just considering these four (rather extensive) observations above,
do you think that Lawrence Krauss is correct to say that all evidence overwhelmingly supports the big bang?
- Bob Enyart
http://rsr.org