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21 pages of results. 31. Seeing Red: Book Review [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... his argument that the cosmological redshift was related more to the age of an object since its birth than to its velocity away from us. With this new book, the Big Bang theory is seen at best to be theoretical flatulence, at worst it is an indictment of academic behaviour and the way science is done these days. "Sometimes ... think that Astronomy is not so much a science as a series of scandals." [Seeing Red, p. 64]. However, some comfort can be taken by members of this list from Arp's opening remark"I started getting letters from scientists in small colleges, in different disciplines, from amateurs, students and lay people. ...
32. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... . Three recent attempts to measure the gravitational constant turned up results markedly different from the accepted value, with two results lower and one higher. Bashing black holes and the big bang Scientific American March 1995, pp. 24-25 and July 1995, p. 11 Although astronomers keep claiming to find black holes, there are still prominent physicists who ... believe in them. By modifying Einstein's general theory of relativity two researchers are able to explain the undoubted presence of very dense objects without recourse to turning them into black holes. Meanwhile Fred Hoyle still sounds out against the establishment, declaring that recent versions of the big bang theory are like medieval theology'. Ironically his autobiography has been raved ...
33. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... 1989:2 , p.22). The brightness is explained, of course, as the vaporisation of its ices. At 200 km in diameter it is very big compared the run-of-the-mill comet: it is a dark body, but this is now considered to be normal for most asteroids and comets since the close study of Halley's comet ... have to be considered to possess a mass, which physicists assume they don't. Occam's razor suggests abandoning the theory which predicts solar output of neutrinos.... Big Bangs, Little Whimpers source: New Scientist 24.3 .90, p. 29 Old stars put their weight behind the big bang theory' on p. 29 ...
34. Thoth Vol canoes" of [Journals] [Thoth]
... of Jupiter's moon Io; the mysteries of Mars and its great chasm, the Valles Marineris; new data on the electrical Sun; and the breakdown of modern cosmology (Big Bang and everything that goes with it). Also, you'll gain many unique insights into the ancient world: the origins of Doomsday anxiety and its relation to calendar ... ; global memories of the Golden Age and the fall into celestial chaos; and the ancient New Years celebration, commemorating the renewal of the world after cosmic catastrophe. If you do not receive this program in your area, you can listen to it live on the Internet by going to- www.sightings.com We recommend that you go ...
35. Plait in Denial [Journals] [SIS Review]
... From: C&C Review 2004:3 (Incorporating C&C Workshop 2004:4 ) Home | Issue Home Plait in Denial Plait's proposition that the Big Bang' theory has evidence to support it is under continual challenge and recent information from Galileo, the satellite sent out to explore Jupiter and Saturn, surely undermines much of ... he says (see Letters' section in this issue and the Pot Pourri' section in C&CR 2004:2 , pp. 19 & 20. The following information and excerpts have been obtainedby Michael Minton from Worlds of Galileo, by M. Hanlon. Constable, London, 2001]: In Galileo's NASA mission to Jupiter a ...
36. Monitor [Journals] [SIS Workshop]
... Newcastle University begins a fascinating article on "the creative cosmos". He notes that most people believe that the Universe increases in complexity with time, from the initial "big bang" to the swirling masses of gases, to planets, to the primitive soup of organic molecules, to life, and to higher forms of life on Earth ... And this is in contradistinction to the dictat of the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which states that the Universe is "inexorably degenerating, sliding irreversibly towards a state of maximum entropy or chaos" He tells how scientists are now beginning to realise the way out of this paradox: matter and energy seem to possess the innate ability to self-organise! ...
37. Friday Evening Discussion [Journals] [SIS Review]
... , red shift is used to estimate how far away distant objects are and it is assumed, going back in time, that the Universe started at one point with a Big Bang. However Arp's study of high redshift quasars shows they emit red light in a different part of the spectrum. Some near' and some more remote' galaxies ... actually connected by lines of quasars. Quasars belong together with galaxies in groups but the clusters they belong in look very different to those shaped by current cosmology dogma. In short, the Big Bang is dead, the Expanding Universe becomes infinite and what we see of it is a lot smaller than we thought when we used Doppler shift as ...
38. Doomsday: The Science of Catastrophe by Fred Warshofsky [Journals] [Kronos]
... University, Madison, N. J. Fred Warshofsky, a prize-winning science writer, has here produced an excellent short overview of catastrophic theories on nearly everything from the "Big Bang" that could have created the cosmos to the thermonuclear holocaust that may terminate social order on Earth. Of the twelve chapters in the book, the three best ... to me to be those on myths, ice ages, and phyletic extinctions. Admirers of Immanuel Velikovsky will, I think, be almost equally pleased with chapter 3, "Worlds in Collision" (pp. 35-63 in the paperback edition), which gives one of the clearest and fairest summaries of "The Velikovsky Affair" that I ...
39. Discussion on Wal Thornhill & Ev Cochrane's papers [Journals] [SIS Review]
... are actually caused by electrical discharges and since Jupiter was recently hit by several large pieces of rock, could such impacts happen to Earth? Secondly, in Lerner's book The Big Bang Never Happened, the author claimed astronomers could now see into space further than the Big Bang theory admits - is this true? Wal said that Earl Milton looked ... the results from the various spectra of the comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 collision with the planet Jupiter and he showed they fitted better with the effects of electrical discharges between the bodies and Jupiter before they actually struck the planet. So those strange, violent outbursts which soaked the detectors on earth and sent them over their detection limits would be explicable in terms ...
40. Halton Arp: A Modern Day Galileo [Journals] [SIS Internet Digest]
... that all galaxies appeared to be moving away from us, then at some time in the past, they must come have come together. This is the origin of the Big Bang theory. The only foundations of the Big Bang are: (a ) Size and luminosity are proportional to redshift. (b ) Size and luminosity are proportional ... distance (c ) Hence Redshift is proportional to distance (d ) Hence velocity of galaxies is proportional to distance (ie, the further away galaxies are, the faster they appear to move). However, some galaxies have been found that fail this test. So Arp questioned the expansion. For example NGC1372A&B has different redshifts ...
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