|
Published by C1ay 11-23-2005
| ||
| ||
| | ||
|
#2
By
coldcreation
on
11-24-2005
|
| Re: Was Einstein's 'biggest blunder' a stellar success? "In some ways it sounds more like science fiction than fact," alleged Dr. Robert Caldwell, a Dartmouth physicist who described the apocalyptic prospect of a ever-accelerating universe in a 2003 paper with Dr. Marc Kamionkowski and Dr. Nevin Weinberg, California Institute of Technology. It's as if we have a rice pudding filled with raisins expanding faster and faster, but all we see are the raisins. We assume the rice is causing the acceleration but the rice remains invisible and undetectable with any instrument, experiment, or direct observation. (One more thing; rice pudding does not expand while cooking or cooling). The other analogy often used is of a balloon expanding as you blow uniformly into it. Only now, the balloon reached its limit and popped, leaving nothing but hot air and cold sweat behind. The partypooper is back! To say that all those concerned are vacillating would be an understatement. To say that their quibbles about lambda have become an insult to the dead would be to state things mildly. To speak about the depressing fate of an over-inflated universe dominated by some obscure force is now inescapable. The great vanishing cogency has become a ubiquitous embarrassment, one that felt oddly familiar. The nagging uncertainty that lies inside the Plank era had been extended across the entire lifespan of the universe, to its End. Coldcreation |
|
#3
By
Southtown
on
11-25-2005
| |
| Re: Was Einstein's 'biggest blunder' a stellar success? Quote:
Besides, Hubble's explanation of redshift is only visible to the blind, and only accepted by those in denial. http://www.skepticalinvestigations.o...ontroversy.htm http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homep...p5/explode.htm | |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
« Simulations Show Liquid Water Could Exist on Mars
|
Hubble, Sloan quadruple number of known optical einstein rings »
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Article: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Article Tools | |
| |
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:03 PM.













