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![]() a_plutonium wrote: * Is it worth mentioning that his "Plutonium Atom Totality Theory" is falsifiable? He theorizes that galaxies are electrons in the "electron dot cloud" of a cosmic Pu atom, so astronomical observations should indicate a total of 94 galaxies (including our own), since Pu has 94 electrons. (Unless he's saying that there are other cosmic Pu atoms in the universe?) - Loadmaster 17:22, 15 April 2007 (UTC) Loadmaster should take a course in physics before entering this discussion. To say something like 94 galaxies when the number of dots of an electron-dot-cloud is precisely governed by the "Electromagnetic Potential" in physics which means there are billions of dots in an electron-dot-cloud and hence billions of galaxies. It is okay for people to opinion about something but when they have little to no understanding of the subject, then their opinion does not count. And if Loadmaster were to have the same remark for the Big Bang, it would go like this "the air compressor for the Big Bang at the moment of explosion would have been 94 air compressors blowing wind ..." -- signed AP Ignoring your personal attacks, there are several points in your theory that are falsifiable. For instance, you state that most of the missing mass of the universe can be explained by the fact that most of the mass of the cosmic plutonium atom resides in its nucleus. Current astronomical observations account for about 4% of the mass of the universe, leaving about 96% unknown, composed of dark matter and dark energy. Since the nucleus of an atom accounts for 99.9998% of its mass (protons and neutrons being about 1,822 times heavier than electrons), there is a discrepancy between your theory and astronomical observations. - Loadmaster 16:52, 9 May 2007 (UTC) Loadmaster's questions are improving, over his pitiful previous question where he thought that the dots of the electron-dot-cloud contained only 94 dots. Pretty stupid physics, but Loadmaster is on his toes now. The answer really, if you know details of current physics is that the Missing Mass of the universe is begot from solid- body-rotation of observed galaxies. And those observations put the RANGE OF MISSING MASS anywhere from 70% all the way up to 99.99999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999 9999999999%. So, if you accept the Atom Totality theory, the answer is ended. If you accept the Big Bang theory, then you have to come up with fairy tales of dark matter and other stupid sordid crap. I post this to sci.physics. And congratulations, Loadmaster, your questions have improved 50%. 216.16.57.138 22:26, 13 May 2007 (UTC) Google is doing a good job of matching interests of what I write and what is advertised. This one caught my eye. --- quoting http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science...ent-star_N.htm Long before our solar system formed and even before the Milky Way assumed its final spiral shape, a star slightly smaller than the Sun blazed into life in our galaxy, formed from the newly scattered remains of the first stars in the universe. Employing techniques similar to those used to date archeological remains here on Earth, scientists have learned that a metal-poor star in our Milky Way called HE 1523 is 13.2 billion years old-just slightly younger than 13.7 billion year age of the universe. Our solar system is estimated to be only about 4.6 billion years old. The findings are detailed in the May 10 issue of Astrophysical Journal. --- end quoting http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science...ent-star_N.htm I am excited by this discovery but will be even more excited because the Atom Totality theory predicts stars in our Milky Way Galaxy that are older than the alleged age of the Cosmos 13.7 billion years. In the Atom Totality theory ages of stars and galaxies are layered. Some ages are from the Plutonium Atom Era, some from the previous Uranium Atom Era, some from the prior Thorium Atom Era. So that the age of 13.7 billion years was merely the Plutonium Atom extension onto a prior older cosmos of the Uranium Atom Totality. So what does this mean for the oldest stars in our galaxy? It means that in the future, there will be found a star that is 15 billion years old, and in the future a star that clocks up an age of 19 to 20 billion years will be found. Such discoveries will bring crisis to the Big Bang believers and they will be robustly adamant that the researchers made mistakes. But they did not make mistakes. The trouble is that the Big Bang theory is a fake. And closer to home, according to the Atom Totality theory, our own Solar System displays this same layering of ages in that the Sun and inner planets date back to the prior Uranium Atom Totality and can be as old as 20 billion years, whereas the outer planets of Jupiter and beyond are of the recent Plutonium Atom Era and are only 4-5 billion years old. So when experimentalists can accurately date the Sun and inner planets compared to the outer planets, be not surprized when the data says that the Sun and Earth are closer to 20 billion years old and Jupiter and Saturn are only 5 billion years old. But can I claim this layering truth now from the given 13.2 billion years? Can I claim victory for the Atom Totality theory, right here, and right now? I think so. Because in the Big Bang theory requires billions of years for the explosion to have coalesced the material to form a star and not just a mere 0.5 billion years. In other words, our present understanding of solar dynamics does not allow for a star forming in 0.5 billion years immediately after the Big Bang explosion. That picture conjures up the image that the explosion had pre-made stars. So I think I can count victory right here and right now. And the icing on the cake will be when researchers report a star that is 20 billion years old in our galaxy. Archimedes Plutonium www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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![]() a_plutonium wrote: (snipped) So what does this mean for the oldest stars in our galaxy? It means that in the future, there will be found a star that is 15 billion years old, and in the future a star that clocks up an age of 19 to 20 billion years will be found. Such discoveries will bring crisis to the Big Bang believers and they will be robustly adamant that the researchers made mistakes. But they did not make mistakes. The trouble is that the Big Bang theory is a fake. I looked up the researchers and found Anna Frebel of the University of Texas. I would almost bet that this team has already found a anomaly star, which to their methods clocks up an age older than 13.7 billion years. But because it does they are hesitant to publish. Archimedes Plutonium www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies |
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