Pincho Paxton Posted August 12, 2012 Report Posted August 12, 2012 (edited) Scientists who look further, and further back in time to the earliest Universe are making a mistake. The age of the Universe is staggered, and fractal. Example: Mankind creates a telescope that is so powerful that it can see humans 2000 light years away. These Humans have travelled to a moon, and are busy mining it for Gold. The man (George) using the telescope is 50 years old. The gold digger in his lens looks 30 years old. I ask George "How old does that man look?" George says he looks about 30 years old. So science gives this man an age of 2030. But science is looking for early physics in the Universe. The man has the physical body of a 30 year old man. So no matter how far away that man is, he is always going to look 30 years old. You learn nothing about the age of the man by looking at him over larger distances. But we know what a 30 year old man looks like, we can say "He looks 30 years old." A galaxy however is harder to tell. We aren't used to ageing Galaxies. In my theory there is no Big Bang. Inflation is a sort of stagnant inflation. It happens from holes, and the holes are infinite. A spacetime grain structure. Galaxies now become part of a fractal, and distance doesn't account for a fractal growth in multiple directions. So distance does not tell you how old a Galaxy really is. If you look at a 15 year old boy 2000 light years away, he is a 15 year old boy still. You haven't gained any knowledge from the speed of light about the physics of that boy. Scientists will find young Galaxies, and old Galaxies sharing some fractal spacing. There is another important point to make. The Galaxies are created from the pressure of a spacetime grain structure. The grain structure creates black holes at the centre of a pressure point. This then gives that structure a relief of pressure. Two Galaxies relieve their pressure towards one another. But then an outflow creates a pressure between them as the two pressures meet up. This is the higher pressure. This pushes the Galaxies apart towards a lower pressure area... Scientists wait for the Universe to turn black as everything pushes apart... it's not going to happen... because as the Galaxies push apart they are feeding a new grain structure between the two Galaxies. This grain structure will eventually create pressure. This pressure will eventually create a black hole. This black hole will eventually create a new Galaxy in the middle of the two Galaxies. The new Galaxy will be younger than the two Galaxies either side of it. Time is not linear in the Universe. Time is a jumble of zones like travelling from England To America, the time zone changes. using telescopes to judge the age of a Galaxy does not work. Pincho Paxton Edited August 13, 2012 by Pincho Paxton Quote
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