Originally posted by Jack the Bodiless
The Baryon-Asymmetry problem, though a mystery, doesn't really qualify as evidence that there was no "Big Bang".
It seems to me that the Big Bang is a good theory primarily due to Occam's Razor: it's the simplest theory that accounts for the observed evidence. Consider the number of ad-hoc theories that would be necessary to replace it:
1. Some other means of accounting for the redshift of distant galaxies. Light gets tired?
2. Some other means of accounting for the 3-degree background radiation.
3. Some other means of accounting for why the stars are still shining: why they haven't consumed all the free hydrogen in the Universe.
4. Some other way of accounting for the different "populations" of stars: those that apparently condensed from pure hydrogen, and those (like our Sun) which contain supernova debris from earlier stars and are therefore rich in heavier elements. IIRC, distant "young" galaxies (they were young when their light started its journey to us) contain more of the former.
The Baryon-Asymmetry problem, though a mystery, doesn't really qualify as evidence that there was no "Big Bang".
It seems to me that the Big Bang is a good theory primarily due to Occam's Razor: it's the simplest theory that accounts for the observed evidence. Consider the number of ad-hoc theories that would be necessary to replace it:
1. Some other means of accounting for the redshift of distant galaxies. Light gets tired?
2. Some other means of accounting for the 3-degree background radiation.
3. Some other means of accounting for why the stars are still shining: why they haven't consumed all the free hydrogen in the Universe.
4. Some other way of accounting for the different "populations" of stars: those that apparently condensed from pure hydrogen, and those (like our Sun) which contain supernova debris from earlier stars and are therefore rich in heavier elements. IIRC, distant "young" galaxies (they were young when their light started its journey to us) contain more of the former.
Of course there is the `big problem' that recent observations now show that distant galaxies are accelerating away from us
Comment