A Big Bang conundrum
Dear JAAKKO KURHI:
On Tuesday, April 9, 2013 5:48:35 PM UTC-7, JAAKKO KURHI wrote:
....
The observer cannot see a 13 billion years-old light
unless the observer is located 13 billion light-years
away from the point the light was emitted. How this
event works with the Big-Bang model, where the
emitted light and the observer originated from the
same young and small universe.
The CMBR light was emitted from a nearly fully -ized Universe. Inflation lets you outrun the light. Besides, the light could go round and round a closed Universe.
Theoretically, it can work if the Milky-Way as an
observer and the emitted light rays traveled near
same speed and near parallel paths, until 13
billion years later the Milky-Way is observing
these old lights.
"Only" way? No, clearly you operate from complete ignorance. You choose to spout, rather than learn.
This event is not happening. The Milky-Way travels
only 300 km/sec. In the environment of the Big-Bang
model, this speed is not enough to reach the
position for observing 13 billion years old light
rays.
"Conundrum", no.
Therefore, those observed 13 billion years-old
lights are not coming from the small, young and
compact universe.
So sad you spend time justifying, rather than learning.
David A. Smith
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