Big bangs

Beyond the boundaries of established science an avalanche of exotic ideas compete for our attention. Experts tell us that these ideas should not be permitted to take up the time of working scientists, and for the most part they are surely correct. But what about the gems in the rubble pile? By what ground-rules might we bring extraordinary new possibilities to light?

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robertcircle1
Posts: 15
Joined: Mon May 25, 2009 1:06 pm

Big bangs

Post by robertcircle1 » Thu May 28, 2009 8:43 am

Dave Smith said:

Bob.

Your speculations should be shared on the New Insights and Mad Ideas board, NOT the Electric Universe board. Not only are they a derailment of the topic of this thread, they in no way constitute discussion of Electric Universe theory. Please familiarise yourself with the rules and guidelines of our forum before posting again.

Dave Smith,
Forum Administrator.

So I've pasted it in here:


If there was a big bang I can understand that in simple terms. I'm no mathmatician. There are some problems with the big bang and all that, like dark matter and accelerating outer galaxies. The simple explanation seems to be that our (known) universe is surrounded by other similar universes. The gravity of the others is pulling our galaxies faster and faster away from the centre, and our gravity is pulling their galaxies faster and faster this way. If we start to see galaxies with blue shifts that would indicate that they came into view maybe 13 billion years ago and are now much closer to us. It might even be that at 12 points around our universe 12 big bangs have already happened and swallowed up much of the matter in our universe and twelve others around us (and the same in all the universes beyond, of which there might be a great but finite number, or even an infinite number).
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If a big bang is the result of a big crunch caused by a twelveth part of twelve universes colliding, to give about the same mass, that would make sense. It would still need a driver. I can only guess at this. If galaxies colliding cause increasing mass and gravity then the blob would get smaller as more galaxies fell into it. And it would get hotter too. When enough matter and energy fell into this giant black hole it might reach a temperature that breaks down all bonds and particles so that it is then a tiny point of pure energy and can sustain gravity no more. With most of the universe now the size of a pin head and pressure in the region of trillions of tons per square milimeter, it would explode with such rapidity that the quantas or whatever of energy would be shooting in every direction, condensing as it went but going so fast that as gravity and mass returned, though gravity would try to pull it all together again, mass inertia would keep it going.
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Also, there would still be galaxies falling in towards the centres. They would interact with the stuff coming out and cause various effects, like spin.

Bob
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