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It is important to save the actual history of astronomy and one way is
to quote liberally what that history was. *SCIENCE NEWS, Vol. 148, Sept 9, 1995 page 166 titled FURTHER EVIDENCE OF A *YOUTHFUL UNIVERSE --- start of quoting SN in part --- The conundrum continues. Yet another set of observations indicates that the universe-- as described by a popular cosmological model-- appears to be younger than its oldest stars. The new study puts the age of the cosmos at 8.4 billion to 10.6 billion years, younger than the 13 billion to 16 billion years estimated for elderly stars. * *Like the findings that made headlines a year ago, the new work relied on the Hubble Space Telescope to obtain the distance to a faraway cluster of galaxies. Combining that distance with the speed at which this cluster recedes from Earth, researchers determined the Hubble constant, which measures the expansion rate and age of the cosmos (SN: 10/8/94,p.232). * *A team led by Nial R. Tanvir of the University of Cambridge in England used a two-step method to estimate the constant. First, they observed a type of "standard candle"--stars known as Cepheid variables-- to find the distance to the spiral galaxy M96 in the Leo cluster of galaxies. Even at 37 million light years, M96 lies too close to the Milky Way for its velocity to reflect cosmic expansion unadulterated by the gravitational tug of other galaxies. But the team used the Leo distance as a stepping-stone to the more remote Coma cluster. * *To obtain the Coma distance, the researchers relied on a unique property of elliptical galaxies, they report in the Sept. 7 NATURE. Astronomers have long known that the bigger an elliptical galaxy, the greater its spread of stellar velocities. But the exact relationship between the two remained uncertain. Previous observations had hinted that the spiral galaxy M96 lies near the center of the Leo cluster, where the ellipticals gather. This coincidence enabled the team to use the distance to M96 to calibrate for the first time the relationship between the size of elliptical galaxies and their velocity spreads. * *Applying this calibration to the elliptical galaxies in the Coma cluster, the team found a distance of about 345 million light years and a Hubble constant between 61 and 77 kilometers per second per megaparsec (1 parsec is 3.26 light years). In models in which the universe has just enough matter to keep from expanding forever, this corresponds to an age of about 9.5 billion years. * *The discrepancy between this age and the age of old stars suggests that astronomers have come to a crossroads. . . . --- end of quoting SN in part --- Now much of modern day astronomy is based on the phony Doppler redshift, which in truth, the redshift is really a refraction-redshift due to light passing through the gravity cells of stars and galaxies. So the Hubble constant is rather phony baloney. To measure age of galaxies or stars, we have to use techniques that do not involve the phony Doppler redshift. Now this is the 5th edition of this book and I need a new technique for accurate age measurement of a star or galaxy. An age technique that uses the Dirac new radioactivities. One such technique would be to say that size is age. The larger the size the older the object. Now I would get into trouble with that technique for planets, since Jupiter would be considered far older than Earth, but I am talking about only stars and galaxies, not planets. So I am going to see if I can work out a new technique for age measurement of stars and galaxies. Only in an Atom Totality can you have a younger universe within its older stars. --- quoting SN in part --- . . . Some astronomers who question Sandage's results say that la supernovas may come in more than one wattage and thus cannot function as a single standard candle. .. . . * *For example, he notes, a high value for the constant would seem to make the age of the universe half that of the oldest stars in it, . . . --- end quoting of SN in part --- *The theoretical solution for the younger universe than its oldest stars is the realization that the universe is an atom itself. The space of an atom is the electron space. Our observable universe is the masses and spaces of the 5f6 electrons of 231PU. Electrons share orbitals. Thus the oldest stars are mass bits of the six 5f6 electrons and the Hubble constant expansion is the Uranium Atom Totality expanding into our present Plutonium Atom Totality. I quoted liberally the above as to give a flavor of the history involved, and a history as reported in science news magazines. The history of science has been rather unkind to scientists who seem to not take the data at face value and who try to change their "numbers data". So that Freedman trying to increase 8 billion years old and Sandage trying to decrease 20 billion years old. Of course, both Freedman and Sandage are trying to accommodate the Big Bang Theory, but the numbers do not fit the Big Bang. The numbers fit a layered Cosmos of older layers with stars 20 billion years old as remnants of the Uranium Atom Totality layer and the newer layer of the Plutonium Atom Totality. I am convinced as the next decades unfold that the layered Universe is true to the Atom Totality theory and more and more reported evidence in favor of the Atom Totality theory. -- More than 90 percent of AP's posts are missing in the Google newsgroups author search archive from May 2012 to May 2013. Drexel University's Math Forum has done a far better job and many of those missing Google posts can be seen he http://mathforum.org/kb/profile.jspa?userID=499986 Archimedes Plutonium http://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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