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Old December 2nd 10, 08:28 PM posted to alt.astronomy
Brad Guth[_3_]
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Posts: 15,175
Default Universe 300 Times Bigger & Much Older (WOW)

On Dec 2, 5:31*am, bert wrote:
Well Ladies and germs TV astronomy news fits well with my conservative
estamate that the universe is 22 billion years young. In the far
future astronomers reading my posts in Google history will know I was
a good thinker. *My far out thinking of today is the reality of the
future. *I know how long it took to create the 90% of the universe of
now. *The other 10%(heavier elements than hydrogen took much longer.)
I am working on how galaxies are created,and why so many?? *I am
taking myself back in spacetime when the first origenal universe was
created. Out of that first #1 universe the cosmos has more universes
than flakes of snow in an endless storm.They are all exactly the same
right down to their number of electrons. *They are created in
pairs,because nature can't create any other way. This all comes out of
my "Critical mass density theory" *which I am in the process of
immerging with my "Spin is in theory" *My convex curve of space
theory *"Spin is in theory" fit so well together its scary * Go
figure *TreBert


With upwards of 60% mass being comprised of red dwarfs, it's hard to
say how much larger volume than previously thought our universe
actually is, but at least it seems there's no shortage of regular mass
populating this known universe, as well as no limits as to the number
of rogue items the size of Ceres or larger (could easily be 2.56e11
per average galaxy, plus whatever else is rogue between galaxies can't
be insignificant).

Extending the radii of each galaxy by 10r (makes our Milky Way radii
worth 500e3 ly) might put that accounting of cool rogue other Galactic
Oort stuff up to 1e12 items per average galaxy. With our spendy JWST,
that new and improved accounting of red dwarfs, brown dwarfs and loads
of other cool/cold items plus whatever dark nebula/molecular stuff
should be worth at least another hundred fold, by rights this should
easily push that extra mass over the required threshold of the
universe being capable of fully collapsing upon itself (given a few
hundred billion years).

The next BB singularity would likely last at least ten billion years
as the new implosion and subsequent explosion runs into the remaining
mass that’s still collapsing from the previous universe.

~ BG