APS April Meeting 2015 Volume 60, Number 4 Saturday–Tuesday, April 11–14, 2015; Baltimore, Maryland

Session X2: Cosmic Microwave Background

10:45 AM–12:33 PM, Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Room: Holiday 1



Sponsoring Unit: DAP

Chair: Raphael Flauger, Carnegie Mellon University



Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.APR.X2.9



Abstract: X2.00009 : Disproof of Big Bang's Foundational Expansion Redshift Assumption Overthrows the Big Bang and Its No-Center Universe and Is Replaced by a Spherically Symmetric Model with Nearby Center with the 2.73K CMR Explained by Vacuum Gravity and Doppler Effects*

12:21 PM–12:33 PM



Preview Abstract Abstract

Author:

Robert Gentry

(Orion Foundation)

Big bang theory holds its central expansion redshift assumption quickly reduced the theorized radiation flash to $\sim$10$^{10}$ K, and then over 13.8 billion years reduced it further to the present 2.73K CMR. Weinberg claims this 2.73K value agrees with big bang theory so well that ``...we can be sure that this radiation was indeed left over from a time about a million years after the `big bang.' '' (TF3M, p180, 1993 ed.) Actually his conclusion is all based on big bang's in-flight wavelength expansion being a valid physical process. In fact all his surmising is nothing but science fiction because our disproof of GR-induced in-flight wavelength expansion [1] definitely proves the 2.73K CMR could never have been the wavelength-expanded relic of any radiation, much less the presumed big bang's. This disproof of big bang's premier prediction is a death blow to the big bang as it is also to the idea that the redshifts in Hubble's redshift relation are expansion shifts; this negates Friedmann's everywhere-the-same, no-center universe concept and proves it does have a nearby Center, a place which can be identified in Psalm 103:19 and in Revelation 20:11 as the location of God's eternal throne. Widely published (Science, Nature, ARNS) evidence of Earth's fiat creation will also be presented.

*The research is supported by the God of Creation. This paper [1] is in for publication.