You seem to want to avoid suffering at all cost, but sometimes the greatest growth happens through suffering and difficulty. We learn more and grow more through difficult times than through easy/enjoyable times. This is true whether you are talking about an individual or a nation or mankind in general. You can see that through the massive downturn in civilization (and morals) that has occurred in the past 50 years. All of the economic and technological growth caused ease (most people didn't have to worry about where there next meal would come from anymore, but instead worried about whether their preferred entertainment would be available or if they might have to hear an opposing viewpoint). Earlier in American history, when times were truly tough, people were happier and grew in wisdom and strength.
In my personal life, I had a string of horrible circumstances happen that led to me being better off (and a greater faith in God). My hot water heat pipes burst flooding the entire downstairs of my house. We had to have giant fans running 24/7 for 6 weeks and the whole downstairs was flood cut. Insurance wanted to only pay 60% of the cost of repairs. We had to get a lawyer to get a settlement to pay 90% of the cost after 9 months of fighting and living in horrible circumstances. As soon as we got the check, we changed insurance companies. Ten days later our house burnt to the ground with not one thing surviving (Fire caused by city employees). Within one month, the new insurance company had paid for the house, the trees, the barn, and a year's rent for while we rebuilt. A month later our car engine burnt up.
A month later my husband ruptured his Achilles tendon. Our rental house had the bedroom and family room on the same level and only a few feet away. The house that burnt down had the bedroom upstairs and very steep/narrow steps and the family room downstairs. We had also had an electric recliner donated to us. Recovery was so much better in the rental house than it would have been in the house that burnt down.
With the extra money from the original settlement and the full payment from insurance, we were able to build our dream home, designed for every stage of life (and in a very fire proof manner) and wind up with a paid off house. We are all better off having been through those hard times than before. Not one member of the family, if given the opportunity to go back and avoid the fire and flood, would chose to do so. We are stronger mentally and as a family than before the hard times and we have more consideration of others going through hard times and can be an encouragement to them.
I would never give up the hard times even if given the chance.
If you think guys pockets are awful, you should see girls pockets. They are much shorter and smaller and almost nothing fits in them. Probably half of girls clothing don't even have pockets
I 100% agree on buying clothes based on the pockets. I've found one brand of dresses that has huge, deep pockets that are wonderful. They are half of my wardrobe.
That must be a government website. I just finished filling out a "mandatory" census for my busisness. The only question worth anything was the question on what is holding back my business. I answered only taxes and government regulation. They literally asked about each of our owner's race in 3 different ways.
If you look at the trees in Spirit Lake that were knocked down and fosslilized by the erruption of Mount St. Helens in the 1980s (forget exact year), you can see exactly how this can happen. The trees in the lake also match in how they have most roots, branches, and bark removed from the trees just like most polystrate fossil trees that are assumed to be millions of years old and to have died in place.
There is even coal forming at the bottom of the lake.
Almost nobody is taught the Rhetoric stage and very few are even taught the logic stage. That is why name calling and silencing opposing views is so prevalent. Nobody knows how to defend their point of view and nobody cares about finding the truth.
The point made is that we are told that the Big Bang and Dark Matter are fact when the evidence does not say so. They keep having to add fudge factors to the Big Bang because the evidence doesn't match the theory nor the predictions made by the Big Bang Theory. Does any of this 100% disprove the Big Bang? No, it does not. Are there other theories that explain the evidence better without the fudge factors? Yes.
One point in the article is that we can't do true experimental science relating to Cosmology and therefore can't prove anything for certain. On the other hand some theories match the evidence better. The Big Bang and billions of years don't match the evidence best and therefore should definitely not be pushed as fact. Although I believe the Big Bang Theory is nonsense, if they pushed it as their preferred theory of many possible theories, I wouldn't have a problem with it or them. That is not what is done, though. They promote the Big Bang as fact and anyone who questions it at all is treated as a quack. That isn't science. That is tyranny. The flat Earthers and Earth-centric gallaxy proponents did the same. The Covid fearmongers did the same. The Global Warming fearmongers did the same. Silencing opposing views is the opposite of science.
This article goes into a lot of detail on why dark matter, as a rescuing device for the Big Bang Theory, can't save the theory.
#grownostr #physics #cosmology #universe #creation #science #truth #christian
"Nowadays, dark matter is added as an essential ingredient to all simulations on star formation because once any hypothesized cloud of hydrogen gas condenses to a certain size it comes into hydrodynamic equilibrium. This means the outward force on the cloud, caused by the accumulated pressure due to heating of the compressed cloud, equals the inward force on the cloud due to the mutual gravitational attraction of all matter in the cloud. At this point no further contraction can occur, unless something else is introduced to overcome this limitation."
Nothing in the Big Bang Theory works without adding dark matter and dark energy which have never been detected. All attempts have failed miserably. Instead of trying to force the Big Bang despite evidence to the contrary and multiple rescuing devices to make it plausible, maybe scientists should look for another theory to explain the universe.
#grownostr #science #creation #physics
Here are a couple more articles explaining problems with the Big Bang Theory.
https://creation.com/big-bang-casts-no-shadows
https://creation.com/the-naturalistic-story-about-planet-formation
https://creation.com/dark-energy-and-the-elusive-chameleon-particle
2 more technical articles:
Hopefully this pdf will attach so you can check out some of the details of Dr. Hartnett's theory.
My copying the paper into NOSTR doesn't do a good job. Maybe I can share with you on Minds.
"Finite bounded expanding white hole universe
without dark matter
John G. Hartnett
School of Physics, the University of Western Australia,
35 Stirling Hwy, Crawley 6009 WA Australia
john@physics.uwa.edu.au
October 17, 2018
Abstract
The solution of Einstein’s field equations in Cosmological General Relativity (CGR), where the Galaxy is at the center of a finite yet bounded
spherically symmetrical isotropic gravitational field, is identical with the
unbounded solution. This leads to the conclusion that the Universe may
be viewed as a finite expanding white hole. The fact that CGR has been
successful in describing the distance modulus verses redshift data of the
high-redshift type Ia supernovae means that the data cannot distinguish
between unbounded models and those with finite bounded radii of at least
cτ . Also it is shown that the Universe is spatially flat at the current epoch
and has been at all past epochs where it was matter dominated.
Keywords: Cosmological General Relativity, high redshift type Ia supernovae, dark matter
1 Introduction
In an interview with Scientific American George Ellis once said [9]
“People need to be aware that there is a range of models that could explain
the observations, . . . For instance, I can construct you a spherically symmetrical
universe with Earth at its center, and you cannot disprove it based on observations. . . . You can only exclude it on philosophical grounds. In my view there
is absolutely nothing wrong in that. What I want to bring into the open is the
fact that we are using philosophical criteria in choosing our models. A lot of
cosmology tries to hide that.”
This paper proposes a model where the Galaxy is at the center of a spherically symmetrical finite bounded universe. It contends that fits to the magnituderedshift data of the high-z type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) [12, 13, 1], are also consistent with this model. That is, providing that the radius of the Universe (a
spherically symmetrical matter distribution) is at least cτ where c is the speed
1
of light and τ ≈ 4.28 × 1017 s (or 13.54 Gyr).[8] Here τ is the Hubble-Carmeli
time constant, or the inverse of the Hubble constant evaluated in the limits of
zero gravity and zero distance.
This model is based on the Cosmological General Relativity (CGR) theory
[5] but explores the motion of particles in a central potential. In this case
the central potential is the result of the Galaxy being situated at the center
of a spherically symmetrical isotropic distribution comprising all matter in the
Universe.
This paper is preceded by Hartnett [10] that forms the basis of the work
presented here. Also Oliveira and Hartnett [8] progressed the work by developing
a density function for higher redshifts. Those paper assumed the unbounded
model. The reader should be familiar with Hartnett [10] at least before reading
this.
1.1 Cosmological General Relativity
The metric [2, 3, 5] used by Carmeli (in CGR) in a generally covariant theory
extends the number of dimensions of the Universe by the addition of a new
dimension – the radial velocity of the galaxies in the Hubble flow. The Hubble
law is assumed as a fundamental axiom for the Universe and the galaxies are
distributed accordingly. The underlying mechanism is that the substance of
which space is built, the vacuum, is uniformly expanding in all directions and
galaxies, as tracers, are fixed to space and therefore the redshifts of distant first
ranked galaxies quantify the speed of the expansion.
In determining the large scale structure of the Universe the usual time dimension is neglected (dt = 0) as observations are taken over such a short time
period compared to the motion of the galaxies in the expansion. It is like
taking a still snap shot of the Universe and therefore only four co-ordinates
x
µ = (x
1
, x2
, x3
, x4
) = (r, θ, φ, τv) are used – three of space and one of velocity.
The parameter τ, the Hubble-Carmeli constant, is a universal constant for all
observers.
Here the CGR theory is considered using a Riemannian four-dimensional
presentation of gravitation in which the coordinates are those of Hubble, i.e.
distance and velocity. This results in a phase space equation where the observables are redshift and distance. The latter may be determined from the
high-redshift type Ia supernova observations.
1.2 Phase space equation
The line element in CGR [6]
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 − R
2
(dθ2 + sin2
θdφ2
), (1)
represents a spherically symmetrical isotropic universe, that is not necessarily
homogeneous.
It is fundamental to the theory that ds = 0. In the case of Cosmological
Special Relativity (see chap.2 of [5]), which is very useful pedagogically, we can
2
write the line element as
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − dr2
, (2)
ignoring θ and φ co-ordinates for the moment. By equating ds = 0 it follows
from (2) that τ dv = dr assuming the positive sign for an expanding universe.
This is then the Hubble law in the small v limit. Hence, in general, this theory
requires that ds = 0.
Using spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) and the isotropy condition dθ = dφ = 0
in (1) then dr represents the radial co-ordinate distance to the source and it
follows from (1) that
τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 = 0, (3)
where ξ is a function of v and r alone. This results in
dr
dv = τe−ξ/2
, (4)
where the positive sign has been chosen for an expanding universe.
2 Solution in central potential
Carmeli found a solution to his field equations, modified from Einstein’s, (see
[10] and [2, 5, 6]) which is of the form
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r)
(5)
with R′ = 1, which must be positive. From the field equations and (5) we get a
differential equation
f
′ +
f
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r, (6)
where f(r) is function of r and satisfies the condition f(r)+ 1 > 0. The prime is
the derivative with respect to r. Here κ = 8πG/c2
τ
2 and ρef f = ρ − ρc where ρ
is the averaged matter density of the Universe and ρc = 3/8πGτ 2
is the critical
density.
The solution of (6), f(r), is the sum of the solution (2GM/c2
r) to the homogeneous equation and a particular solution (- κ
3
τ
2ρef f r
2
) to the inhomogeneous
equation. In [5] Carmeli discarded the homogeneous solution saying it was not
relevant to the Universe, but the solution of a particle at the origin of coordinates, or in other words, in a central potential.
Now suppose we model the Universe as a ball of dust of radius ∆ with us, the
observer, at the center of that ball. In this case the gravitational potential written in spherical coordinates that satisfies Poisson’s equation in the Newtonian
approximation is
Φ(r) = −
GM
r
(7)
3
for the vacuum solution, but inside an isotropic matter distribution
Φ(r) = −G
4πρ
r
Z r
0
r
′2
dr′ + 4πρ Z ∆
r
r
′
dr′
!
=
2
3
Gπρr2 − 2Gπρ∆2
, (8)
where it is assumed the matter density ρ is uniform throughout the Universe.
At the origin (r = 0) Φ(0) = −2Gπρm∆2
, where ρ = ρm the matter density at
the present epoch. In general ρ depends on epoch. Because we are considering
no time development ρ is only a function of redshift z and ρm can be considered
constant.
From (8) it is clear to see that by considering a finite distribution of matter
of radial extent ∆, it has the effect of adding a constant to f(r) that is consistent
with the constant 2Gπρ∆2
in (8), where f(r) is now identified with −4Φ/c2
.
Equation (5) is essentially Carmeli’s equation A.19, the solution to his equation A.17 from p.122 of [5]. More generally (5) can be written as
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r) − K
, (9)
where K is a constant. This is the most general form of the solution of Carmeli’s
equation A.17. So by substituting (9) into Carmeli’s A.18, A.21 becomes instead
1
RR′
(2R˙ R˙′ − f
′
) + 1
R2
(R˙ 2 − f + K) = κτ 2
ρef f . (10)
Therefore (9) is also a valid solution of the Einstein field equations (A.12 -
A.18 [5]) in this model. Making the assignment R = r in (10) yields a more
general version of (6), that is,
f
′ +
f − K
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r. (11)
The solution of (11) is then
f(r) = −
1
3
κτ 2
ρef f r
2 + K. (12)
From a comparison with (8) it would seem that the constant K takes the form
K = 8πGρef f (0)∆2/c2
. It is independent of r and describes a non-zero gravitational potential of a finite universe measured at the origin of coordinates. There
is some ambiguity however as to which density to use in Carmelian cosmology
since it is not the same as Newtonian theory. Here ρef f is used and evaluated
at r = 0.
In the above Carmelian theory it initially assumed that the Universe has
expanded over time and at any given epoch it has an averaged density ρ, and
hence ρef f . The solution of the field equations has been sought on this basis.
4
However because the Carmeli metric is solved in an instant of time (on a cosmological scale) any time dependence is neglected. In fact, the general time
dependent solution has not yet been found. But since we observe the expanding
Universe with the coordinates of Hubble at each epoch (or redshift z) we see the
Universe with a different density ρ(z) and an effective density ρef f (z). Carmeli
arrived at his solution with the constant density assumption. I have made the
implicit assumption that the solution is also valid if we allow the density to vary
as a function of redshift, as is expected with expansion.
Now it follows from (4), (9) and (12) that
dr
dv = τ
s
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2, (13)
where Ω = ρ/ρc. This compares with the solution when the central potential is
neglected (i.e. ∆ → 0). In fact, the result is identical as we would expect in a
universe where the Hubble law is universally true.
Therefore (13) may be integrated exactly and yields the same result as
Carmeli,
r
cτ
=
sinh( v
c
√
1 − Ω)
√
1 − Ω
. (14)
Since observations in the distant cosmos are always in terms of redshift, z,
we write (14) as a function of redshift where r is expressed in units of cτ and
v/c = ((1 + z)
2 − 1)/((1 + z)
2 + 1) from the relativistic Doppler formula. The
latter is appropriate since this is a velocity dimension.
What is important to note though is that regardless of the geometry of the
Universe, provided it is spherically symmetrical and isotropic on the large scale,
(14) is identical to that we would get where the Universe has a unique center,
with one difference which is explored in the following section. For an isotropic
universe without a unique center, one can have an arbitrary number of centers.
However if we are currently in a universe where the Galaxy is at the center of
the local isotropy distribution this means the Universe we see must be very large
and we are currently limited from seeing into an adjacent region with a different
isotropy center.
3 Gravitational Redshift
In Hartnett [10] the geometry in the model is the usual unbounded type, as
found in an infinite universe, for example. In a finite bounded universe, an
additional effect may result from the photons being received from the distant
sources. The gravitational redshift (zgrav) resulting from the Galaxy sitting at
the unique center of a finite spherically symmetrical matter distribution must
be considered. In this case we need to consider the difference in gravitational
potential between the points of emission and reception of a photon. Now the
00th metric component, the time part of the 5D metric of coordinates x
k =
t, r, θ, φ, v (k = 0 − 4), is required but it has never been determined for the
5
cosmos in the Carmelian theory. In general relativity we would relate it by
g00 = 1 − 4Φ/c2 where −4Φ is the gravitational potential. The factor 4 and
minus sign arise from the Carmelian theory when (12) and (8) are compared.
So the question must be answered, “What is g00 metric component for the large
scale structure of the universe in CGR?”
First note from (5) and (6) the g11 metric component (considered in an
unbounded universe for the moment)
g11 = −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
(15)
in CGR we can write a scale radius
R =
cτ
p
|1 − Ω|
. (16)
Hence we can define an energy density from the curvature
ΩK =
c
2
h
2R2
=
c
2
τ
2
R2
, (17)
which, when we use (16), becomes
ΩK = 1 − Ω. (18)
This quantifies the energy in the curved spacevelocity.
In the FRW theory the energy density of the cosmological constant is defined
ρΛ = Λ/8πG hence
ΩΛ =
Λ
3H2
0
. (19)
Even though the cosmological constant is not explicitly used in CGR, it follows
from the definition of the critical density that
ρc =
3
8πGτ 2
=
Λ
8πG, (20)
when the cosmological constant Λ is identified with 3/τ 2
. Therefore in CGR it
follows that
ΩΛ =
Λ
3h
2
= Λ
τ
2
3
= 1. (21)
This means that in CGR the vacuum energy ρvac = Λ/8πG is encoded in the
metric via the critical density since ρef f = ρ−ρc principally defines the physics.
So ΩΛ = 1 identically and at all epochs of time. (The determination of ΩΛ in
[10] was flawed due to an incorrect definition.) Also we can relate ΩΛ to the
curvature density by
ΩK = ΩΛ − Ω, (22)
which becomes
Ωk = ΩΛ − Ωm, (23)
6
at the present epoch (z ≈ 0). Here Ω = Ωm(1 + z)
3 and hence ΩK → Ωk as
z → 0.
Finally we can write for the total energy density, the sum of the matter
density and the curvature density,
Ωt = Ω + ΩK = Ω + 1 − Ω = 1, (24)
which means the present epoch value is trivially
Ω0 = Ωm + Ωk = Ωm + 1 − Ωm = 1. (25)
This means that the 3D spatial part of the Universe is always flat as it expands.
This explains why we live in a universe that we observe to be identically geometrically spatially flat. The curvature is due to the velocity dimension. Only
at some past epoch, in a radiation dominated universe, with radiation energy
density ΩR(1 + z)
4
, would the total mass/energy density depart from unity.
Now considering a finite bounded universe, from (12), using Ω = ρ/ρc, I
therefore write g00 as
g00(r) = 1 + (1 − Ωt)r
2 + 3(Ωt − 1)∆2
, (26)
where r and ∆ are expressed in units of cτ. Equation (26) follows from g00 =
1 − 4Φ/c2 where Φ is taken from the gravitational potential but with effective
density, which in turn involves the total energy density because we are now
considering spacetime.
Clearly from (24) it follows that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch. Thus from
the usual relativistic expression
1 + zgrav =
s
g00(0)
g00(r)
= 1, (27)
and the gravitational redshift is zero regardless of epoch. As expected if the
emission and reception of a photon both occur in flat space then we’d expect
no gravitational effects.
In an unbounded universe, though no gravitational effects need be considered, the result g00 = 1 is also the same. Therefore we can write down the
full 5D line element for CGR in any dynamic spherically symmetrical isotropic
universe,
ds2 = c
2
dt2 −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
dr2 + τ
2
dv2
. (28)
The θ and φ coordinates do not appear due to the isotropy condition dθ = dφ =
0. Due to the Hubble law the 2nd and 3rd terms sum to zero leaving dt = ds/c,
the proper time. Clocks, co-moving with the galaxies in the Hubble expansion,
would measure the same proper time.
Since it follows from (26) that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch, g00(r) is not
sensitive to any value of ∆. This means the above analysis is true regardless
7
of whether the universe is bounded or unbounded. The observations cannot
distinguish. In an unbounded or bounded universe of any type no gravitational
redshift (due to cosmological causes) in light from distant source galaxies would
be observed.
However inside the Galaxy we expect the matter density to be much higher
than critical, ie Ωgalaxy ≫ 1 and the total mass/energy density can be written
Ω0|galaxy = Ωgalaxy + Ωk ≈ Ωgalaxy, (29)
because Ωk ≈ 1, since it is cosmologically determined. Therefore this explains
why the galaxy matter density only is appropriate when considering the Poisson
equation for galaxies.[11]
As a result inside a galaxy we can write
g00(r) = 1 + ΩK
r
2
c
2τ
2
+ Ωgalaxy
r
2
c
2τ
2
, (30)
in terms of densities at some past epoch. Depending on the mass density of the
galaxy, or cluster of galaxies, the value of g00 here changes. As we approach
larger and larger structures it mass density approaches that of the Universe as
a whole and g00 → 1 as we approach the largest scales of the Universe. Galaxies
in the cosmos then act only as local perturbations but have no effect on ΩK.
That depends only on the average mass density of the whole Universe, which
depends on epoch (z).
Equation (30) is in essence the same expression used on page 173 of Carmeli
[5] in his gravitational redshift formula rewritten here as
λ2
λ1
=
s
1 + ΩKr
2
2
/c2τ
2 − RS/r2
1 + ΩKr
2
1
/c2τ
2 − RS/r1
. (31)
involving a cosmological contribution (ΩKr
2/c2
τ
2
) and RS = 2GM/c2
, a local
contribution where the mass M is that of a compact object. The curvature
(ΩK) results from the averaged mass/energy density of the whole cosmos, which
determines how the galaxies ‘move’ but motions of particles within galaxies is
dominated by the mass of the galaxy and the masses of the compact objects
within. Therefore when considering the gravitational redshifts due to compact
objects we can neglect any cosmological effects, only the usual Schwarzschild
radius of the object need be considered. The cosmological contributions in (31)
are generally negligible. This then leads back to the realm of general relativity.
4 White Hole
Now if we assume the radial extent of a finite matter distribution at the current
epoch is equal to the current epoch scale radius, we can write
∆ = 1
√
Ωk
=
1
p
|1 − Ωm|
, (32)
8
expressed in units of cτ. In such a case, ∆ = 1.02 cτ if Ωm = 0.04 and
∆ = 1.01 cτ if Ωm = 0.02.
It is important to note also that in Carmeli’s unbounded model (14) describes
the redshift distance relationship but there is no central potential. In Hartnett
[10] and in Oliveira and Hartnett [8] equation (14) was curve fitted to the SNe
Ia data and was found to agree with Ωm = 0.02 − 0.04 without the inclusion of
dark matter or dark energy. Therefore the same conclusion must also apply to
the finite bounded model suggested here.
In order to achieve a fit to the data, using either the finite bounded or
unbounded models, the white hole solution of (6) or (11) must be chosen. The
sign of the terms in (12) means that the potential implicit in (12) is a potential
hill, not a potential well. Therefore the solution describes an expanding white
hole with the observer at the origin of the coordinates, the unique center of the
Universe. Only philosophically can this solution be rejected. Using the Carmeli
theory, the observational data cannot distinguish between finite bounded models
(∞ > ∆ ≥ cτ) and finite (∆ = 0) or infinite (∆ = ∞) unbounded models .
The physical meaning is that the solution, developed in this paper, represents
an expanding white hole centered on the Galaxy. The galaxies in the Universe
are spherically symmetrically distributed around the Galaxy. The observed
redshifts are the result of cosmological expansion alone.
Moreover if we assume ∆ ≈ cτ and Ωm = 0.04 then it can be shown [8] that
the Schwarzschild radius for the finite Universe
Rs ≈ Ωm∆ = 0.04 cτ. (33)
Therefore for a finite universe with ∆ ≈ cτ it follows that Rs ≈ 0.04 cτ ≈
200 M pc. Therefore an expanding finite bounded universe can be considered to
be a white hole. As it expands the matter enclosed within the Schwarzschild
radius gets less and less. The gravitational radius of that matter therefore
shrinks towards the Earth at the center.
This is similar to the theoretical result obtained by Smoller and Temple [14]
who constructed a new cosmology from the FRW metric but with a shock wave
causing a time reversal white hole. In their model the total mass behind the
shock decreases as the shock wave expands, which is spherically symmetrically
centered on the Galaxy. Their paper states in part “...the entropy condition
implies that the shock wave must weaken to the point where it settles down
to an Oppenheimer Snyder interface, (bounding a finite total mass), that eventually emerges from the white hole event horizon of an ambient Schwarzschild
spacetime.”
This result then implies that the earth or at least the Galaxy is in fact close
to the physical center of the Universe. Smoller and Temple state [15] that “With
a shock wave present, the Copernican Principle is violated in the sense that the
earth then has a special position relative to the shock wave. But of course, in
these shock wave refinements of the FRW metric, there is a spacetime on the
other side of the shock wave, beyond the galaxies, and so the scale of uniformity
of the FRW metric, the scale on which the density of the galaxies is uniform, is
no longer the largest length scale”[emphasis added].
9
Their shock wave refinement of a critically expanding FRW metric leads to
a big bang universe of finite total mass. This model presented here also has a
finite total mass and is a spatially flat universe. It describes a finite bounded
white hole that started expanding at some time in the past.
5 Conclusion
Since the Carmeli theory has been successfully analyzed with distance modulus
data derived by the high-z type Ia supernova teams it must also be consistent
with a universe that places the Galaxy at the center of an spherically symmetrical isotropic expanding white hole of finite radius. The result describes particles
moving in both a central potential and an accelerating spherically expanding
universe without the need for the inclusion of dark matter. The data cannot be
used to exclude models with finite extensions ∆ ≥ cτ.
References
[1] P. Astier, et al “The Supernova Legacy Survey: Measurement of ΩM ,
ΩΛ and w from the first year data set”, Astron. Astrophys. (2005)
arXiv:astro-ph/0510447
[2] S. Behar, M. Carmeli, “Cosmological relativity: A new theory of cosmology”, Int. J. Theor. Phys. 39 (5): 1375–1396 (2000)
[3] M. Carmeli, “Cosmological General Relativity”, Commun. Theor. Phys.
5:159 (1996)
[4] M. Carmeli, “Is galaxy dark matter a property of spacetime?”, Int. J.
Theor. Phys. 37 (10): 2621–2625 (1998)
[5] M. Carmeli, Cosmological Special Relativity (World Scientific, Singapore,
2002)
[6] M. Carmeli, “Accelerating Universe: Theory versus Experiment”, [arXiv:
astro-ph/0205396] (2002)
[7] M. Carmeli, J.G. Hartnett, F.J. Oliveira, “The cosmic time in terms of the
redshift,” Found. Phys. Lett. 19(3):277–283 (2006) arXiv:gr-qc/0506079
[8] F.J. Oliveira, J.G. Hartnett, “Carmeli’s cosmology fits data for an accelerating and decelerating universe without dark matter nor dark energy,”
Found. Phys. Lett. 19(6):519-535 (2006) arXiv: astro-ph/0603500
[9] W.W. Gibbs, “Profile: George F. R. Ellis”, Scientific American 273(4):
28-29 (1995)
10
[10] J.G. Hartnett, “The distance modulus determined from Carmeli’s cosmology fits the accelerating universe data of the high-redshift type Ia
supernovae without dark matter,” Found. Phys. 36(6): 839–861 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0501526
[11] Hartnett, J.G. “Spiral galaxy rotation curves determined from Carmelian
general relativity” Int. J. Theor. Phys. 45(11):2147–2165 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0511756
[12] R.A. Knop, et al, “New constraints on ΩM , ΩΛ and w from an independent set of 11 high-redshift supernovae observed with the Hubble Space
Telescope”, Ap. J. 598: 102–137 (2003)
[13] A.G. Riess, et al, “Type Ia supernovae discoveries at z > 1 from the Hubble
Space Telescope: Evidence for past deceleration and constraints on dark
energy evolution” Ap. J. 607: 665–687 (2004)
[14] J. Smoller and B. Temple, PNAS 100(20): 11216–11218 (2003)
[15] J. Smoller and B. Temple, http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/∼temple/articles/temple1234.pdf"
Here are a couple more articles explaining problems with the Big Bang Theory.
https://creation.com/big-bang-casts-no-shadows
https://creation.com/the-naturalistic-story-about-planet-formation
https://creation.com/dark-energy-and-the-elusive-chameleon-particle
Hopefully this pdf will attach so you can check out some of the details of Dr. Hartnett's theory.
My copying the paper into NOSTR doesn't do a good job. Maybe I can share with you on Minds.
"Finite bounded expanding white hole universe
without dark matter
John G. Hartnett
School of Physics, the University of Western Australia,
35 Stirling Hwy, Crawley 6009 WA Australia
john@physics.uwa.edu.au
October 17, 2018
Abstract
The solution of Einstein’s field equations in Cosmological General Relativity (CGR), where the Galaxy is at the center of a finite yet bounded
spherically symmetrical isotropic gravitational field, is identical with the
unbounded solution. This leads to the conclusion that the Universe may
be viewed as a finite expanding white hole. The fact that CGR has been
successful in describing the distance modulus verses redshift data of the
high-redshift type Ia supernovae means that the data cannot distinguish
between unbounded models and those with finite bounded radii of at least
cτ . Also it is shown that the Universe is spatially flat at the current epoch
and has been at all past epochs where it was matter dominated.
Keywords: Cosmological General Relativity, high redshift type Ia supernovae, dark matter
1 Introduction
In an interview with Scientific American George Ellis once said [9]
“People need to be aware that there is a range of models that could explain
the observations, . . . For instance, I can construct you a spherically symmetrical
universe with Earth at its center, and you cannot disprove it based on observations. . . . You can only exclude it on philosophical grounds. In my view there
is absolutely nothing wrong in that. What I want to bring into the open is the
fact that we are using philosophical criteria in choosing our models. A lot of
cosmology tries to hide that.”
This paper proposes a model where the Galaxy is at the center of a spherically symmetrical finite bounded universe. It contends that fits to the magnituderedshift data of the high-z type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) [12, 13, 1], are also consistent with this model. That is, providing that the radius of the Universe (a
spherically symmetrical matter distribution) is at least cτ where c is the speed
1
of light and τ ≈ 4.28 × 1017 s (or 13.54 Gyr).[8] Here τ is the Hubble-Carmeli
time constant, or the inverse of the Hubble constant evaluated in the limits of
zero gravity and zero distance.
This model is based on the Cosmological General Relativity (CGR) theory
[5] but explores the motion of particles in a central potential. In this case
the central potential is the result of the Galaxy being situated at the center
of a spherically symmetrical isotropic distribution comprising all matter in the
Universe.
This paper is preceded by Hartnett [10] that forms the basis of the work
presented here. Also Oliveira and Hartnett [8] progressed the work by developing
a density function for higher redshifts. Those paper assumed the unbounded
model. The reader should be familiar with Hartnett [10] at least before reading
this.
1.1 Cosmological General Relativity
The metric [2, 3, 5] used by Carmeli (in CGR) in a generally covariant theory
extends the number of dimensions of the Universe by the addition of a new
dimension – the radial velocity of the galaxies in the Hubble flow. The Hubble
law is assumed as a fundamental axiom for the Universe and the galaxies are
distributed accordingly. The underlying mechanism is that the substance of
which space is built, the vacuum, is uniformly expanding in all directions and
galaxies, as tracers, are fixed to space and therefore the redshifts of distant first
ranked galaxies quantify the speed of the expansion.
In determining the large scale structure of the Universe the usual time dimension is neglected (dt = 0) as observations are taken over such a short time
period compared to the motion of the galaxies in the expansion. It is like
taking a still snap shot of the Universe and therefore only four co-ordinates
x
µ = (x
1
, x2
, x3
, x4
) = (r, θ, φ, τv) are used – three of space and one of velocity.
The parameter τ, the Hubble-Carmeli constant, is a universal constant for all
observers.
Here the CGR theory is considered using a Riemannian four-dimensional
presentation of gravitation in which the coordinates are those of Hubble, i.e.
distance and velocity. This results in a phase space equation where the observables are redshift and distance. The latter may be determined from the
high-redshift type Ia supernova observations.
1.2 Phase space equation
The line element in CGR [6]
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 − R
2
(dθ2 + sin2
θdφ2
), (1)
represents a spherically symmetrical isotropic universe, that is not necessarily
homogeneous.
It is fundamental to the theory that ds = 0. In the case of Cosmological
Special Relativity (see chap.2 of [5]), which is very useful pedagogically, we can
2
write the line element as
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − dr2
, (2)
ignoring θ and φ co-ordinates for the moment. By equating ds = 0 it follows
from (2) that τ dv = dr assuming the positive sign for an expanding universe.
This is then the Hubble law in the small v limit. Hence, in general, this theory
requires that ds = 0.
Using spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) and the isotropy condition dθ = dφ = 0
in (1) then dr represents the radial co-ordinate distance to the source and it
follows from (1) that
τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 = 0, (3)
where ξ is a function of v and r alone. This results in
dr
dv = τe−ξ/2
, (4)
where the positive sign has been chosen for an expanding universe.
2 Solution in central potential
Carmeli found a solution to his field equations, modified from Einstein’s, (see
[10] and [2, 5, 6]) which is of the form
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r)
(5)
with R′ = 1, which must be positive. From the field equations and (5) we get a
differential equation
f
′ +
f
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r, (6)
where f(r) is function of r and satisfies the condition f(r)+ 1 > 0. The prime is
the derivative with respect to r. Here κ = 8πG/c2
τ
2 and ρef f = ρ − ρc where ρ
is the averaged matter density of the Universe and ρc = 3/8πGτ 2
is the critical
density.
The solution of (6), f(r), is the sum of the solution (2GM/c2
r) to the homogeneous equation and a particular solution (- κ
3
τ
2ρef f r
2
) to the inhomogeneous
equation. In [5] Carmeli discarded the homogeneous solution saying it was not
relevant to the Universe, but the solution of a particle at the origin of coordinates, or in other words, in a central potential.
Now suppose we model the Universe as a ball of dust of radius ∆ with us, the
observer, at the center of that ball. In this case the gravitational potential written in spherical coordinates that satisfies Poisson’s equation in the Newtonian
approximation is
Φ(r) = −
GM
r
(7)
3
for the vacuum solution, but inside an isotropic matter distribution
Φ(r) = −G
4πρ
r
Z r
0
r
′2
dr′ + 4πρ Z ∆
r
r
′
dr′
!
=
2
3
Gπρr2 − 2Gπρ∆2
, (8)
where it is assumed the matter density ρ is uniform throughout the Universe.
At the origin (r = 0) Φ(0) = −2Gπρm∆2
, where ρ = ρm the matter density at
the present epoch. In general ρ depends on epoch. Because we are considering
no time development ρ is only a function of redshift z and ρm can be considered
constant.
From (8) it is clear to see that by considering a finite distribution of matter
of radial extent ∆, it has the effect of adding a constant to f(r) that is consistent
with the constant 2Gπρ∆2
in (8), where f(r) is now identified with −4Φ/c2
.
Equation (5) is essentially Carmeli’s equation A.19, the solution to his equation A.17 from p.122 of [5]. More generally (5) can be written as
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r) − K
, (9)
where K is a constant. This is the most general form of the solution of Carmeli’s
equation A.17. So by substituting (9) into Carmeli’s A.18, A.21 becomes instead
1
RR′
(2R˙ R˙′ − f
′
) + 1
R2
(R˙ 2 − f + K) = κτ 2
ρef f . (10)
Therefore (9) is also a valid solution of the Einstein field equations (A.12 -
A.18 [5]) in this model. Making the assignment R = r in (10) yields a more
general version of (6), that is,
f
′ +
f − K
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r. (11)
The solution of (11) is then
f(r) = −
1
3
κτ 2
ρef f r
2 + K. (12)
From a comparison with (8) it would seem that the constant K takes the form
K = 8πGρef f (0)∆2/c2
. It is independent of r and describes a non-zero gravitational potential of a finite universe measured at the origin of coordinates. There
is some ambiguity however as to which density to use in Carmelian cosmology
since it is not the same as Newtonian theory. Here ρef f is used and evaluated
at r = 0.
In the above Carmelian theory it initially assumed that the Universe has
expanded over time and at any given epoch it has an averaged density ρ, and
hence ρef f . The solution of the field equations has been sought on this basis.
4
However because the Carmeli metric is solved in an instant of time (on a cosmological scale) any time dependence is neglected. In fact, the general time
dependent solution has not yet been found. But since we observe the expanding
Universe with the coordinates of Hubble at each epoch (or redshift z) we see the
Universe with a different density ρ(z) and an effective density ρef f (z). Carmeli
arrived at his solution with the constant density assumption. I have made the
implicit assumption that the solution is also valid if we allow the density to vary
as a function of redshift, as is expected with expansion.
Now it follows from (4), (9) and (12) that
dr
dv = τ
s
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2, (13)
where Ω = ρ/ρc. This compares with the solution when the central potential is
neglected (i.e. ∆ → 0). In fact, the result is identical as we would expect in a
universe where the Hubble law is universally true.
Therefore (13) may be integrated exactly and yields the same result as
Carmeli,
r
cτ
=
sinh( v
c
√
1 − Ω)
√
1 − Ω
. (14)
Since observations in the distant cosmos are always in terms of redshift, z,
we write (14) as a function of redshift where r is expressed in units of cτ and
v/c = ((1 + z)
2 − 1)/((1 + z)
2 + 1) from the relativistic Doppler formula. The
latter is appropriate since this is a velocity dimension.
What is important to note though is that regardless of the geometry of the
Universe, provided it is spherically symmetrical and isotropic on the large scale,
(14) is identical to that we would get where the Universe has a unique center,
with one difference which is explored in the following section. For an isotropic
universe without a unique center, one can have an arbitrary number of centers.
However if we are currently in a universe where the Galaxy is at the center of
the local isotropy distribution this means the Universe we see must be very large
and we are currently limited from seeing into an adjacent region with a different
isotropy center.
3 Gravitational Redshift
In Hartnett [10] the geometry in the model is the usual unbounded type, as
found in an infinite universe, for example. In a finite bounded universe, an
additional effect may result from the photons being received from the distant
sources. The gravitational redshift (zgrav) resulting from the Galaxy sitting at
the unique center of a finite spherically symmetrical matter distribution must
be considered. In this case we need to consider the difference in gravitational
potential between the points of emission and reception of a photon. Now the
00th metric component, the time part of the 5D metric of coordinates x
k =
t, r, θ, φ, v (k = 0 − 4), is required but it has never been determined for the
5
cosmos in the Carmelian theory. In general relativity we would relate it by
g00 = 1 − 4Φ/c2 where −4Φ is the gravitational potential. The factor 4 and
minus sign arise from the Carmelian theory when (12) and (8) are compared.
So the question must be answered, “What is g00 metric component for the large
scale structure of the universe in CGR?”
First note from (5) and (6) the g11 metric component (considered in an
unbounded universe for the moment)
g11 = −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
(15)
in CGR we can write a scale radius
R =
cτ
p
|1 − Ω|
. (16)
Hence we can define an energy density from the curvature
ΩK =
c
2
h
2R2
=
c
2
τ
2
R2
, (17)
which, when we use (16), becomes
ΩK = 1 − Ω. (18)
This quantifies the energy in the curved spacevelocity.
In the FRW theory the energy density of the cosmological constant is defined
ρΛ = Λ/8πG hence
ΩΛ =
Λ
3H2
0
. (19)
Even though the cosmological constant is not explicitly used in CGR, it follows
from the definition of the critical density that
ρc =
3
8πGτ 2
=
Λ
8πG, (20)
when the cosmological constant Λ is identified with 3/τ 2
. Therefore in CGR it
follows that
ΩΛ =
Λ
3h
2
= Λ
τ
2
3
= 1. (21)
This means that in CGR the vacuum energy ρvac = Λ/8πG is encoded in the
metric via the critical density since ρef f = ρ−ρc principally defines the physics.
So ΩΛ = 1 identically and at all epochs of time. (The determination of ΩΛ in
[10] was flawed due to an incorrect definition.) Also we can relate ΩΛ to the
curvature density by
ΩK = ΩΛ − Ω, (22)
which becomes
Ωk = ΩΛ − Ωm, (23)
6
at the present epoch (z ≈ 0). Here Ω = Ωm(1 + z)
3 and hence ΩK → Ωk as
z → 0.
Finally we can write for the total energy density, the sum of the matter
density and the curvature density,
Ωt = Ω + ΩK = Ω + 1 − Ω = 1, (24)
which means the present epoch value is trivially
Ω0 = Ωm + Ωk = Ωm + 1 − Ωm = 1. (25)
This means that the 3D spatial part of the Universe is always flat as it expands.
This explains why we live in a universe that we observe to be identically geometrically spatially flat. The curvature is due to the velocity dimension. Only
at some past epoch, in a radiation dominated universe, with radiation energy
density ΩR(1 + z)
4
, would the total mass/energy density depart from unity.
Now considering a finite bounded universe, from (12), using Ω = ρ/ρc, I
therefore write g00 as
g00(r) = 1 + (1 − Ωt)r
2 + 3(Ωt − 1)∆2
, (26)
where r and ∆ are expressed in units of cτ. Equation (26) follows from g00 =
1 − 4Φ/c2 where Φ is taken from the gravitational potential but with effective
density, which in turn involves the total energy density because we are now
considering spacetime.
Clearly from (24) it follows that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch. Thus from
the usual relativistic expression
1 + zgrav =
s
g00(0)
g00(r)
= 1, (27)
and the gravitational redshift is zero regardless of epoch. As expected if the
emission and reception of a photon both occur in flat space then we’d expect
no gravitational effects.
In an unbounded universe, though no gravitational effects need be considered, the result g00 = 1 is also the same. Therefore we can write down the
full 5D line element for CGR in any dynamic spherically symmetrical isotropic
universe,
ds2 = c
2
dt2 −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
dr2 + τ
2
dv2
. (28)
The θ and φ coordinates do not appear due to the isotropy condition dθ = dφ =
0. Due to the Hubble law the 2nd and 3rd terms sum to zero leaving dt = ds/c,
the proper time. Clocks, co-moving with the galaxies in the Hubble expansion,
would measure the same proper time.
Since it follows from (26) that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch, g00(r) is not
sensitive to any value of ∆. This means the above analysis is true regardless
7
of whether the universe is bounded or unbounded. The observations cannot
distinguish. In an unbounded or bounded universe of any type no gravitational
redshift (due to cosmological causes) in light from distant source galaxies would
be observed.
However inside the Galaxy we expect the matter density to be much higher
than critical, ie Ωgalaxy ≫ 1 and the total mass/energy density can be written
Ω0|galaxy = Ωgalaxy + Ωk ≈ Ωgalaxy, (29)
because Ωk ≈ 1, since it is cosmologically determined. Therefore this explains
why the galaxy matter density only is appropriate when considering the Poisson
equation for galaxies.[11]
As a result inside a galaxy we can write
g00(r) = 1 + ΩK
r
2
c
2τ
2
+ Ωgalaxy
r
2
c
2τ
2
, (30)
in terms of densities at some past epoch. Depending on the mass density of the
galaxy, or cluster of galaxies, the value of g00 here changes. As we approach
larger and larger structures it mass density approaches that of the Universe as
a whole and g00 → 1 as we approach the largest scales of the Universe. Galaxies
in the cosmos then act only as local perturbations but have no effect on ΩK.
That depends only on the average mass density of the whole Universe, which
depends on epoch (z).
Equation (30) is in essence the same expression used on page 173 of Carmeli
[5] in his gravitational redshift formula rewritten here as
λ2
λ1
=
s
1 + ΩKr
2
2
/c2τ
2 − RS/r2
1 + ΩKr
2
1
/c2τ
2 − RS/r1
. (31)
involving a cosmological contribution (ΩKr
2/c2
τ
2
) and RS = 2GM/c2
, a local
contribution where the mass M is that of a compact object. The curvature
(ΩK) results from the averaged mass/energy density of the whole cosmos, which
determines how the galaxies ‘move’ but motions of particles within galaxies is
dominated by the mass of the galaxy and the masses of the compact objects
within. Therefore when considering the gravitational redshifts due to compact
objects we can neglect any cosmological effects, only the usual Schwarzschild
radius of the object need be considered. The cosmological contributions in (31)
are generally negligible. This then leads back to the realm of general relativity.
4 White Hole
Now if we assume the radial extent of a finite matter distribution at the current
epoch is equal to the current epoch scale radius, we can write
∆ = 1
√
Ωk
=
1
p
|1 − Ωm|
, (32)
8
expressed in units of cτ. In such a case, ∆ = 1.02 cτ if Ωm = 0.04 and
∆ = 1.01 cτ if Ωm = 0.02.
It is important to note also that in Carmeli’s unbounded model (14) describes
the redshift distance relationship but there is no central potential. In Hartnett
[10] and in Oliveira and Hartnett [8] equation (14) was curve fitted to the SNe
Ia data and was found to agree with Ωm = 0.02 − 0.04 without the inclusion of
dark matter or dark energy. Therefore the same conclusion must also apply to
the finite bounded model suggested here.
In order to achieve a fit to the data, using either the finite bounded or
unbounded models, the white hole solution of (6) or (11) must be chosen. The
sign of the terms in (12) means that the potential implicit in (12) is a potential
hill, not a potential well. Therefore the solution describes an expanding white
hole with the observer at the origin of the coordinates, the unique center of the
Universe. Only philosophically can this solution be rejected. Using the Carmeli
theory, the observational data cannot distinguish between finite bounded models
(∞ > ∆ ≥ cτ) and finite (∆ = 0) or infinite (∆ = ∞) unbounded models .
The physical meaning is that the solution, developed in this paper, represents
an expanding white hole centered on the Galaxy. The galaxies in the Universe
are spherically symmetrically distributed around the Galaxy. The observed
redshifts are the result of cosmological expansion alone.
Moreover if we assume ∆ ≈ cτ and Ωm = 0.04 then it can be shown [8] that
the Schwarzschild radius for the finite Universe
Rs ≈ Ωm∆ = 0.04 cτ. (33)
Therefore for a finite universe with ∆ ≈ cτ it follows that Rs ≈ 0.04 cτ ≈
200 M pc. Therefore an expanding finite bounded universe can be considered to
be a white hole. As it expands the matter enclosed within the Schwarzschild
radius gets less and less. The gravitational radius of that matter therefore
shrinks towards the Earth at the center.
This is similar to the theoretical result obtained by Smoller and Temple [14]
who constructed a new cosmology from the FRW metric but with a shock wave
causing a time reversal white hole. In their model the total mass behind the
shock decreases as the shock wave expands, which is spherically symmetrically
centered on the Galaxy. Their paper states in part “...the entropy condition
implies that the shock wave must weaken to the point where it settles down
to an Oppenheimer Snyder interface, (bounding a finite total mass), that eventually emerges from the white hole event horizon of an ambient Schwarzschild
spacetime.”
This result then implies that the earth or at least the Galaxy is in fact close
to the physical center of the Universe. Smoller and Temple state [15] that “With
a shock wave present, the Copernican Principle is violated in the sense that the
earth then has a special position relative to the shock wave. But of course, in
these shock wave refinements of the FRW metric, there is a spacetime on the
other side of the shock wave, beyond the galaxies, and so the scale of uniformity
of the FRW metric, the scale on which the density of the galaxies is uniform, is
no longer the largest length scale”[emphasis added].
9
Their shock wave refinement of a critically expanding FRW metric leads to
a big bang universe of finite total mass. This model presented here also has a
finite total mass and is a spatially flat universe. It describes a finite bounded
white hole that started expanding at some time in the past.
5 Conclusion
Since the Carmeli theory has been successfully analyzed with distance modulus
data derived by the high-z type Ia supernova teams it must also be consistent
with a universe that places the Galaxy at the center of an spherically symmetrical isotropic expanding white hole of finite radius. The result describes particles
moving in both a central potential and an accelerating spherically expanding
universe without the need for the inclusion of dark matter. The data cannot be
used to exclude models with finite extensions ∆ ≥ cτ.
References
[1] P. Astier, et al “The Supernova Legacy Survey: Measurement of ΩM ,
ΩΛ and w from the first year data set”, Astron. Astrophys. (2005)
arXiv:astro-ph/0510447
[2] S. Behar, M. Carmeli, “Cosmological relativity: A new theory of cosmology”, Int. J. Theor. Phys. 39 (5): 1375–1396 (2000)
[3] M. Carmeli, “Cosmological General Relativity”, Commun. Theor. Phys.
5:159 (1996)
[4] M. Carmeli, “Is galaxy dark matter a property of spacetime?”, Int. J.
Theor. Phys. 37 (10): 2621–2625 (1998)
[5] M. Carmeli, Cosmological Special Relativity (World Scientific, Singapore,
2002)
[6] M. Carmeli, “Accelerating Universe: Theory versus Experiment”, [arXiv:
astro-ph/0205396] (2002)
[7] M. Carmeli, J.G. Hartnett, F.J. Oliveira, “The cosmic time in terms of the
redshift,” Found. Phys. Lett. 19(3):277–283 (2006) arXiv:gr-qc/0506079
[8] F.J. Oliveira, J.G. Hartnett, “Carmeli’s cosmology fits data for an accelerating and decelerating universe without dark matter nor dark energy,”
Found. Phys. Lett. 19(6):519-535 (2006) arXiv: astro-ph/0603500
[9] W.W. Gibbs, “Profile: George F. R. Ellis”, Scientific American 273(4):
28-29 (1995)
10
[10] J.G. Hartnett, “The distance modulus determined from Carmeli’s cosmology fits the accelerating universe data of the high-redshift type Ia
supernovae without dark matter,” Found. Phys. 36(6): 839–861 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0501526
[11] Hartnett, J.G. “Spiral galaxy rotation curves determined from Carmelian
general relativity” Int. J. Theor. Phys. 45(11):2147–2165 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0511756
[12] R.A. Knop, et al, “New constraints on ΩM , ΩΛ and w from an independent set of 11 high-redshift supernovae observed with the Hubble Space
Telescope”, Ap. J. 598: 102–137 (2003)
[13] A.G. Riess, et al, “Type Ia supernovae discoveries at z > 1 from the Hubble
Space Telescope: Evidence for past deceleration and constraints on dark
energy evolution” Ap. J. 607: 665–687 (2004)
[14] J. Smoller and B. Temple, PNAS 100(20): 11216–11218 (2003)
[15] J. Smoller and B. Temple, http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/∼temple/articles/temple1234.pdf"
This article isn't deep enough to fully explain the alternative theories, but it does a good job of explaining why we shouldn't trust dark matter and why it is almost certainly simply a fudge factor for a failed theory.
"Are You Looking Forward to the Mark of the Beast?
Post author
By John Gideon Hartnett
Post date
July 26, 2023
If you believe God is in control of all events, of all the rulers in this world, then there is no need to worry regardless of your eschatological beliefs. I believe as many do that God is sovereign. That is, nothing happens outside of His will.
Satan, the prince of the air, rules through the kingdoms of men. But Satan is not omniscient or omnipotent. Only God has those qualities. Satan is a powerless punk by comparison to the Creator God of the universe. Nothing Satan does is outside God’s will, whether it is revealed or secret. Nor can it be.
God uses the evil ones like Satan and his followers to accomplish His will. God says:
I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.
Isaiah 45:7
This verse does not mean God created the evil but that He created the people or angels who embrace evil. It means He created the agents, that with free will, who choose to do evil deeds. But God sees all things in space and time. He is omniscient. So He uses these evil characters to achieve His own will. That is especially true of Satan, who was once Lucifer the light bearer, the top angel in heaven.
Jesus is coming back to the world soon and it will not be as a “suffering servant” (Isaiah 53, 1 Peter 2:21–25) but as the “lion of the tribe of Judah” (Revelation 5:5). When exactly that is going to happen we do not know. But the scene is set in Revelation 13:
And he [the false prophet] causes all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads: And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name. Here is wisdom. Let him that has understanding count the number of the beast: for it is the number of a man; and his number is Six hundred threescore and six [666].
Revelation 13:16-18
Very rapidly that beast system is being put in place with digital IDs, digital currencies, and mass surveillance systems. Once they have that in place it will be very difficult to enter into a store to buy food. Some stores are already doing this where customers must sign in with a digital/biometric ID and pay with their credit card or digital cashless wallet.
So if Revelation chapter 13 and 14 is anything to go by, I say “bring it on”! The sooner the better. Revelation 14:1 tells us the Lamb of God stands on Mount Zion the heavenly city and calls His children who are sealed with God’s mark in their foreheads. Verse 14:3-5 tells us the redeemed, those who are “virgins”, meaning not defiled with the profane world, will be taken to God’s throne in heaven. This is another description of the resurrection of the believers.
So, I say, bring it on. The sooner Satan does his thing and brings in total control and mark of the beast (which is God’s will), the sooner the redeemed will fly."
#bible #christian #revelation #endtimes #grownostr
https://biblescienceforum.com/2023/07/26/are-you-looking-forward-to-the-mark-of-the-beast/
Hopefully this pdf will attach so you can check out some of the details of Dr. Hartnett's theory.
My copying the paper into NOSTR doesn't do a good job. Maybe I can share with you on Minds.
"Finite bounded expanding white hole universe
without dark matter
John G. Hartnett
School of Physics, the University of Western Australia,
35 Stirling Hwy, Crawley 6009 WA Australia
john@physics.uwa.edu.au
October 17, 2018
Abstract
The solution of Einstein’s field equations in Cosmological General Relativity (CGR), where the Galaxy is at the center of a finite yet bounded
spherically symmetrical isotropic gravitational field, is identical with the
unbounded solution. This leads to the conclusion that the Universe may
be viewed as a finite expanding white hole. The fact that CGR has been
successful in describing the distance modulus verses redshift data of the
high-redshift type Ia supernovae means that the data cannot distinguish
between unbounded models and those with finite bounded radii of at least
cτ . Also it is shown that the Universe is spatially flat at the current epoch
and has been at all past epochs where it was matter dominated.
Keywords: Cosmological General Relativity, high redshift type Ia supernovae, dark matter
1 Introduction
In an interview with Scientific American George Ellis once said [9]
“People need to be aware that there is a range of models that could explain
the observations, . . . For instance, I can construct you a spherically symmetrical
universe with Earth at its center, and you cannot disprove it based on observations. . . . You can only exclude it on philosophical grounds. In my view there
is absolutely nothing wrong in that. What I want to bring into the open is the
fact that we are using philosophical criteria in choosing our models. A lot of
cosmology tries to hide that.”
This paper proposes a model where the Galaxy is at the center of a spherically symmetrical finite bounded universe. It contends that fits to the magnituderedshift data of the high-z type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) [12, 13, 1], are also consistent with this model. That is, providing that the radius of the Universe (a
spherically symmetrical matter distribution) is at least cτ where c is the speed
1
of light and τ ≈ 4.28 × 1017 s (or 13.54 Gyr).[8] Here τ is the Hubble-Carmeli
time constant, or the inverse of the Hubble constant evaluated in the limits of
zero gravity and zero distance.
This model is based on the Cosmological General Relativity (CGR) theory
[5] but explores the motion of particles in a central potential. In this case
the central potential is the result of the Galaxy being situated at the center
of a spherically symmetrical isotropic distribution comprising all matter in the
Universe.
This paper is preceded by Hartnett [10] that forms the basis of the work
presented here. Also Oliveira and Hartnett [8] progressed the work by developing
a density function for higher redshifts. Those paper assumed the unbounded
model. The reader should be familiar with Hartnett [10] at least before reading
this.
1.1 Cosmological General Relativity
The metric [2, 3, 5] used by Carmeli (in CGR) in a generally covariant theory
extends the number of dimensions of the Universe by the addition of a new
dimension – the radial velocity of the galaxies in the Hubble flow. The Hubble
law is assumed as a fundamental axiom for the Universe and the galaxies are
distributed accordingly. The underlying mechanism is that the substance of
which space is built, the vacuum, is uniformly expanding in all directions and
galaxies, as tracers, are fixed to space and therefore the redshifts of distant first
ranked galaxies quantify the speed of the expansion.
In determining the large scale structure of the Universe the usual time dimension is neglected (dt = 0) as observations are taken over such a short time
period compared to the motion of the galaxies in the expansion. It is like
taking a still snap shot of the Universe and therefore only four co-ordinates
x
µ = (x
1
, x2
, x3
, x4
) = (r, θ, φ, τv) are used – three of space and one of velocity.
The parameter τ, the Hubble-Carmeli constant, is a universal constant for all
observers.
Here the CGR theory is considered using a Riemannian four-dimensional
presentation of gravitation in which the coordinates are those of Hubble, i.e.
distance and velocity. This results in a phase space equation where the observables are redshift and distance. The latter may be determined from the
high-redshift type Ia supernova observations.
1.2 Phase space equation
The line element in CGR [6]
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 − R
2
(dθ2 + sin2
θdφ2
), (1)
represents a spherically symmetrical isotropic universe, that is not necessarily
homogeneous.
It is fundamental to the theory that ds = 0. In the case of Cosmological
Special Relativity (see chap.2 of [5]), which is very useful pedagogically, we can
2
write the line element as
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − dr2
, (2)
ignoring θ and φ co-ordinates for the moment. By equating ds = 0 it follows
from (2) that τ dv = dr assuming the positive sign for an expanding universe.
This is then the Hubble law in the small v limit. Hence, in general, this theory
requires that ds = 0.
Using spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) and the isotropy condition dθ = dφ = 0
in (1) then dr represents the radial co-ordinate distance to the source and it
follows from (1) that
τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 = 0, (3)
where ξ is a function of v and r alone. This results in
dr
dv = τe−ξ/2
, (4)
where the positive sign has been chosen for an expanding universe.
2 Solution in central potential
Carmeli found a solution to his field equations, modified from Einstein’s, (see
[10] and [2, 5, 6]) which is of the form
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r)
(5)
with R′ = 1, which must be positive. From the field equations and (5) we get a
differential equation
f
′ +
f
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r, (6)
where f(r) is function of r and satisfies the condition f(r)+ 1 > 0. The prime is
the derivative with respect to r. Here κ = 8πG/c2
τ
2 and ρef f = ρ − ρc where ρ
is the averaged matter density of the Universe and ρc = 3/8πGτ 2
is the critical
density.
The solution of (6), f(r), is the sum of the solution (2GM/c2
r) to the homogeneous equation and a particular solution (- κ
3
τ
2ρef f r
2
) to the inhomogeneous
equation. In [5] Carmeli discarded the homogeneous solution saying it was not
relevant to the Universe, but the solution of a particle at the origin of coordinates, or in other words, in a central potential.
Now suppose we model the Universe as a ball of dust of radius ∆ with us, the
observer, at the center of that ball. In this case the gravitational potential written in spherical coordinates that satisfies Poisson’s equation in the Newtonian
approximation is
Φ(r) = −
GM
r
(7)
3
for the vacuum solution, but inside an isotropic matter distribution
Φ(r) = −G
4πρ
r
Z r
0
r
′2
dr′ + 4πρ Z ∆
r
r
′
dr′
!
=
2
3
Gπρr2 − 2Gπρ∆2
, (8)
where it is assumed the matter density ρ is uniform throughout the Universe.
At the origin (r = 0) Φ(0) = −2Gπρm∆2
, where ρ = ρm the matter density at
the present epoch. In general ρ depends on epoch. Because we are considering
no time development ρ is only a function of redshift z and ρm can be considered
constant.
From (8) it is clear to see that by considering a finite distribution of matter
of radial extent ∆, it has the effect of adding a constant to f(r) that is consistent
with the constant 2Gπρ∆2
in (8), where f(r) is now identified with −4Φ/c2
.
Equation (5) is essentially Carmeli’s equation A.19, the solution to his equation A.17 from p.122 of [5]. More generally (5) can be written as
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r) − K
, (9)
where K is a constant. This is the most general form of the solution of Carmeli’s
equation A.17. So by substituting (9) into Carmeli’s A.18, A.21 becomes instead
1
RR′
(2R˙ R˙′ − f
′
) + 1
R2
(R˙ 2 − f + K) = κτ 2
ρef f . (10)
Therefore (9) is also a valid solution of the Einstein field equations (A.12 -
A.18 [5]) in this model. Making the assignment R = r in (10) yields a more
general version of (6), that is,
f
′ +
f − K
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r. (11)
The solution of (11) is then
f(r) = −
1
3
κτ 2
ρef f r
2 + K. (12)
From a comparison with (8) it would seem that the constant K takes the form
K = 8πGρef f (0)∆2/c2
. It is independent of r and describes a non-zero gravitational potential of a finite universe measured at the origin of coordinates. There
is some ambiguity however as to which density to use in Carmelian cosmology
since it is not the same as Newtonian theory. Here ρef f is used and evaluated
at r = 0.
In the above Carmelian theory it initially assumed that the Universe has
expanded over time and at any given epoch it has an averaged density ρ, and
hence ρef f . The solution of the field equations has been sought on this basis.
4
However because the Carmeli metric is solved in an instant of time (on a cosmological scale) any time dependence is neglected. In fact, the general time
dependent solution has not yet been found. But since we observe the expanding
Universe with the coordinates of Hubble at each epoch (or redshift z) we see the
Universe with a different density ρ(z) and an effective density ρef f (z). Carmeli
arrived at his solution with the constant density assumption. I have made the
implicit assumption that the solution is also valid if we allow the density to vary
as a function of redshift, as is expected with expansion.
Now it follows from (4), (9) and (12) that
dr
dv = τ
s
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2, (13)
where Ω = ρ/ρc. This compares with the solution when the central potential is
neglected (i.e. ∆ → 0). In fact, the result is identical as we would expect in a
universe where the Hubble law is universally true.
Therefore (13) may be integrated exactly and yields the same result as
Carmeli,
r
cτ
=
sinh( v
c
√
1 − Ω)
√
1 − Ω
. (14)
Since observations in the distant cosmos are always in terms of redshift, z,
we write (14) as a function of redshift where r is expressed in units of cτ and
v/c = ((1 + z)
2 − 1)/((1 + z)
2 + 1) from the relativistic Doppler formula. The
latter is appropriate since this is a velocity dimension.
What is important to note though is that regardless of the geometry of the
Universe, provided it is spherically symmetrical and isotropic on the large scale,
(14) is identical to that we would get where the Universe has a unique center,
with one difference which is explored in the following section. For an isotropic
universe without a unique center, one can have an arbitrary number of centers.
However if we are currently in a universe where the Galaxy is at the center of
the local isotropy distribution this means the Universe we see must be very large
and we are currently limited from seeing into an adjacent region with a different
isotropy center.
3 Gravitational Redshift
In Hartnett [10] the geometry in the model is the usual unbounded type, as
found in an infinite universe, for example. In a finite bounded universe, an
additional effect may result from the photons being received from the distant
sources. The gravitational redshift (zgrav) resulting from the Galaxy sitting at
the unique center of a finite spherically symmetrical matter distribution must
be considered. In this case we need to consider the difference in gravitational
potential between the points of emission and reception of a photon. Now the
00th metric component, the time part of the 5D metric of coordinates x
k =
t, r, θ, φ, v (k = 0 − 4), is required but it has never been determined for the
5
cosmos in the Carmelian theory. In general relativity we would relate it by
g00 = 1 − 4Φ/c2 where −4Φ is the gravitational potential. The factor 4 and
minus sign arise from the Carmelian theory when (12) and (8) are compared.
So the question must be answered, “What is g00 metric component for the large
scale structure of the universe in CGR?”
First note from (5) and (6) the g11 metric component (considered in an
unbounded universe for the moment)
g11 = −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
(15)
in CGR we can write a scale radius
R =
cτ
p
|1 − Ω|
. (16)
Hence we can define an energy density from the curvature
ΩK =
c
2
h
2R2
=
c
2
τ
2
R2
, (17)
which, when we use (16), becomes
ΩK = 1 − Ω. (18)
This quantifies the energy in the curved spacevelocity.
In the FRW theory the energy density of the cosmological constant is defined
ρΛ = Λ/8πG hence
ΩΛ =
Λ
3H2
0
. (19)
Even though the cosmological constant is not explicitly used in CGR, it follows
from the definition of the critical density that
ρc =
3
8πGτ 2
=
Λ
8πG, (20)
when the cosmological constant Λ is identified with 3/τ 2
. Therefore in CGR it
follows that
ΩΛ =
Λ
3h
2
= Λ
τ
2
3
= 1. (21)
This means that in CGR the vacuum energy ρvac = Λ/8πG is encoded in the
metric via the critical density since ρef f = ρ−ρc principally defines the physics.
So ΩΛ = 1 identically and at all epochs of time. (The determination of ΩΛ in
[10] was flawed due to an incorrect definition.) Also we can relate ΩΛ to the
curvature density by
ΩK = ΩΛ − Ω, (22)
which becomes
Ωk = ΩΛ − Ωm, (23)
6
at the present epoch (z ≈ 0). Here Ω = Ωm(1 + z)
3 and hence ΩK → Ωk as
z → 0.
Finally we can write for the total energy density, the sum of the matter
density and the curvature density,
Ωt = Ω + ΩK = Ω + 1 − Ω = 1, (24)
which means the present epoch value is trivially
Ω0 = Ωm + Ωk = Ωm + 1 − Ωm = 1. (25)
This means that the 3D spatial part of the Universe is always flat as it expands.
This explains why we live in a universe that we observe to be identically geometrically spatially flat. The curvature is due to the velocity dimension. Only
at some past epoch, in a radiation dominated universe, with radiation energy
density ΩR(1 + z)
4
, would the total mass/energy density depart from unity.
Now considering a finite bounded universe, from (12), using Ω = ρ/ρc, I
therefore write g00 as
g00(r) = 1 + (1 − Ωt)r
2 + 3(Ωt − 1)∆2
, (26)
where r and ∆ are expressed in units of cτ. Equation (26) follows from g00 =
1 − 4Φ/c2 where Φ is taken from the gravitational potential but with effective
density, which in turn involves the total energy density because we are now
considering spacetime.
Clearly from (24) it follows that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch. Thus from
the usual relativistic expression
1 + zgrav =
s
g00(0)
g00(r)
= 1, (27)
and the gravitational redshift is zero regardless of epoch. As expected if the
emission and reception of a photon both occur in flat space then we’d expect
no gravitational effects.
In an unbounded universe, though no gravitational effects need be considered, the result g00 = 1 is also the same. Therefore we can write down the
full 5D line element for CGR in any dynamic spherically symmetrical isotropic
universe,
ds2 = c
2
dt2 −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
dr2 + τ
2
dv2
. (28)
The θ and φ coordinates do not appear due to the isotropy condition dθ = dφ =
0. Due to the Hubble law the 2nd and 3rd terms sum to zero leaving dt = ds/c,
the proper time. Clocks, co-moving with the galaxies in the Hubble expansion,
would measure the same proper time.
Since it follows from (26) that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch, g00(r) is not
sensitive to any value of ∆. This means the above analysis is true regardless
7
of whether the universe is bounded or unbounded. The observations cannot
distinguish. In an unbounded or bounded universe of any type no gravitational
redshift (due to cosmological causes) in light from distant source galaxies would
be observed.
However inside the Galaxy we expect the matter density to be much higher
than critical, ie Ωgalaxy ≫ 1 and the total mass/energy density can be written
Ω0|galaxy = Ωgalaxy + Ωk ≈ Ωgalaxy, (29)
because Ωk ≈ 1, since it is cosmologically determined. Therefore this explains
why the galaxy matter density only is appropriate when considering the Poisson
equation for galaxies.[11]
As a result inside a galaxy we can write
g00(r) = 1 + ΩK
r
2
c
2τ
2
+ Ωgalaxy
r
2
c
2τ
2
, (30)
in terms of densities at some past epoch. Depending on the mass density of the
galaxy, or cluster of galaxies, the value of g00 here changes. As we approach
larger and larger structures it mass density approaches that of the Universe as
a whole and g00 → 1 as we approach the largest scales of the Universe. Galaxies
in the cosmos then act only as local perturbations but have no effect on ΩK.
That depends only on the average mass density of the whole Universe, which
depends on epoch (z).
Equation (30) is in essence the same expression used on page 173 of Carmeli
[5] in his gravitational redshift formula rewritten here as
λ2
λ1
=
s
1 + ΩKr
2
2
/c2τ
2 − RS/r2
1 + ΩKr
2
1
/c2τ
2 − RS/r1
. (31)
involving a cosmological contribution (ΩKr
2/c2
τ
2
) and RS = 2GM/c2
, a local
contribution where the mass M is that of a compact object. The curvature
(ΩK) results from the averaged mass/energy density of the whole cosmos, which
determines how the galaxies ‘move’ but motions of particles within galaxies is
dominated by the mass of the galaxy and the masses of the compact objects
within. Therefore when considering the gravitational redshifts due to compact
objects we can neglect any cosmological effects, only the usual Schwarzschild
radius of the object need be considered. The cosmological contributions in (31)
are generally negligible. This then leads back to the realm of general relativity.
4 White Hole
Now if we assume the radial extent of a finite matter distribution at the current
epoch is equal to the current epoch scale radius, we can write
∆ = 1
√
Ωk
=
1
p
|1 − Ωm|
, (32)
8
expressed in units of cτ. In such a case, ∆ = 1.02 cτ if Ωm = 0.04 and
∆ = 1.01 cτ if Ωm = 0.02.
It is important to note also that in Carmeli’s unbounded model (14) describes
the redshift distance relationship but there is no central potential. In Hartnett
[10] and in Oliveira and Hartnett [8] equation (14) was curve fitted to the SNe
Ia data and was found to agree with Ωm = 0.02 − 0.04 without the inclusion of
dark matter or dark energy. Therefore the same conclusion must also apply to
the finite bounded model suggested here.
In order to achieve a fit to the data, using either the finite bounded or
unbounded models, the white hole solution of (6) or (11) must be chosen. The
sign of the terms in (12) means that the potential implicit in (12) is a potential
hill, not a potential well. Therefore the solution describes an expanding white
hole with the observer at the origin of the coordinates, the unique center of the
Universe. Only philosophically can this solution be rejected. Using the Carmeli
theory, the observational data cannot distinguish between finite bounded models
(∞ > ∆ ≥ cτ) and finite (∆ = 0) or infinite (∆ = ∞) unbounded models .
The physical meaning is that the solution, developed in this paper, represents
an expanding white hole centered on the Galaxy. The galaxies in the Universe
are spherically symmetrically distributed around the Galaxy. The observed
redshifts are the result of cosmological expansion alone.
Moreover if we assume ∆ ≈ cτ and Ωm = 0.04 then it can be shown [8] that
the Schwarzschild radius for the finite Universe
Rs ≈ Ωm∆ = 0.04 cτ. (33)
Therefore for a finite universe with ∆ ≈ cτ it follows that Rs ≈ 0.04 cτ ≈
200 M pc. Therefore an expanding finite bounded universe can be considered to
be a white hole. As it expands the matter enclosed within the Schwarzschild
radius gets less and less. The gravitational radius of that matter therefore
shrinks towards the Earth at the center.
This is similar to the theoretical result obtained by Smoller and Temple [14]
who constructed a new cosmology from the FRW metric but with a shock wave
causing a time reversal white hole. In their model the total mass behind the
shock decreases as the shock wave expands, which is spherically symmetrically
centered on the Galaxy. Their paper states in part “...the entropy condition
implies that the shock wave must weaken to the point where it settles down
to an Oppenheimer Snyder interface, (bounding a finite total mass), that eventually emerges from the white hole event horizon of an ambient Schwarzschild
spacetime.”
This result then implies that the earth or at least the Galaxy is in fact close
to the physical center of the Universe. Smoller and Temple state [15] that “With
a shock wave present, the Copernican Principle is violated in the sense that the
earth then has a special position relative to the shock wave. But of course, in
these shock wave refinements of the FRW metric, there is a spacetime on the
other side of the shock wave, beyond the galaxies, and so the scale of uniformity
of the FRW metric, the scale on which the density of the galaxies is uniform, is
no longer the largest length scale”[emphasis added].
9
Their shock wave refinement of a critically expanding FRW metric leads to
a big bang universe of finite total mass. This model presented here also has a
finite total mass and is a spatially flat universe. It describes a finite bounded
white hole that started expanding at some time in the past.
5 Conclusion
Since the Carmeli theory has been successfully analyzed with distance modulus
data derived by the high-z type Ia supernova teams it must also be consistent
with a universe that places the Galaxy at the center of an spherically symmetrical isotropic expanding white hole of finite radius. The result describes particles
moving in both a central potential and an accelerating spherically expanding
universe without the need for the inclusion of dark matter. The data cannot be
used to exclude models with finite extensions ∆ ≥ cτ.
References
[1] P. Astier, et al “The Supernova Legacy Survey: Measurement of ΩM ,
ΩΛ and w from the first year data set”, Astron. Astrophys. (2005)
arXiv:astro-ph/0510447
[2] S. Behar, M. Carmeli, “Cosmological relativity: A new theory of cosmology”, Int. J. Theor. Phys. 39 (5): 1375–1396 (2000)
[3] M. Carmeli, “Cosmological General Relativity”, Commun. Theor. Phys.
5:159 (1996)
[4] M. Carmeli, “Is galaxy dark matter a property of spacetime?”, Int. J.
Theor. Phys. 37 (10): 2621–2625 (1998)
[5] M. Carmeli, Cosmological Special Relativity (World Scientific, Singapore,
2002)
[6] M. Carmeli, “Accelerating Universe: Theory versus Experiment”, [arXiv:
astro-ph/0205396] (2002)
[7] M. Carmeli, J.G. Hartnett, F.J. Oliveira, “The cosmic time in terms of the
redshift,” Found. Phys. Lett. 19(3):277–283 (2006) arXiv:gr-qc/0506079
[8] F.J. Oliveira, J.G. Hartnett, “Carmeli’s cosmology fits data for an accelerating and decelerating universe without dark matter nor dark energy,”
Found. Phys. Lett. 19(6):519-535 (2006) arXiv: astro-ph/0603500
[9] W.W. Gibbs, “Profile: George F. R. Ellis”, Scientific American 273(4):
28-29 (1995)
10
[10] J.G. Hartnett, “The distance modulus determined from Carmeli’s cosmology fits the accelerating universe data of the high-redshift type Ia
supernovae without dark matter,” Found. Phys. 36(6): 839–861 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0501526
[11] Hartnett, J.G. “Spiral galaxy rotation curves determined from Carmelian
general relativity” Int. J. Theor. Phys. 45(11):2147–2165 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0511756
[12] R.A. Knop, et al, “New constraints on ΩM , ΩΛ and w from an independent set of 11 high-redshift supernovae observed with the Hubble Space
Telescope”, Ap. J. 598: 102–137 (2003)
[13] A.G. Riess, et al, “Type Ia supernovae discoveries at z > 1 from the Hubble
Space Telescope: Evidence for past deceleration and constraints on dark
energy evolution” Ap. J. 607: 665–687 (2004)
[14] J. Smoller and B. Temple, PNAS 100(20): 11216–11218 (2003)
[15] J. Smoller and B. Temple, http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/∼temple/articles/temple1234.pdf"
The book "Updated Starlight Time, and the New Physics" by Dr. John Hartnett explains everything in an easier to read fashion with the first 2/3 being more layman's language (at least if you have a basic understanding of physics) and the last 1/3 being the in depth math that many people won't be able to follow.
Hopefully this pdf will attach so you can check out some of the details of Dr. Hartnett's theory.
My copying the paper into NOSTR doesn't do a good job. Maybe I can share with you on Minds.
"Finite bounded expanding white hole universe
without dark matter
John G. Hartnett
School of Physics, the University of Western Australia,
35 Stirling Hwy, Crawley 6009 WA Australia
john@physics.uwa.edu.au
October 17, 2018
Abstract
The solution of Einstein’s field equations in Cosmological General Relativity (CGR), where the Galaxy is at the center of a finite yet bounded
spherically symmetrical isotropic gravitational field, is identical with the
unbounded solution. This leads to the conclusion that the Universe may
be viewed as a finite expanding white hole. The fact that CGR has been
successful in describing the distance modulus verses redshift data of the
high-redshift type Ia supernovae means that the data cannot distinguish
between unbounded models and those with finite bounded radii of at least
cτ . Also it is shown that the Universe is spatially flat at the current epoch
and has been at all past epochs where it was matter dominated.
Keywords: Cosmological General Relativity, high redshift type Ia supernovae, dark matter
1 Introduction
In an interview with Scientific American George Ellis once said [9]
“People need to be aware that there is a range of models that could explain
the observations, . . . For instance, I can construct you a spherically symmetrical
universe with Earth at its center, and you cannot disprove it based on observations. . . . You can only exclude it on philosophical grounds. In my view there
is absolutely nothing wrong in that. What I want to bring into the open is the
fact that we are using philosophical criteria in choosing our models. A lot of
cosmology tries to hide that.”
This paper proposes a model where the Galaxy is at the center of a spherically symmetrical finite bounded universe. It contends that fits to the magnituderedshift data of the high-z type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) [12, 13, 1], are also consistent with this model. That is, providing that the radius of the Universe (a
spherically symmetrical matter distribution) is at least cτ where c is the speed
1
of light and τ ≈ 4.28 × 1017 s (or 13.54 Gyr).[8] Here τ is the Hubble-Carmeli
time constant, or the inverse of the Hubble constant evaluated in the limits of
zero gravity and zero distance.
This model is based on the Cosmological General Relativity (CGR) theory
[5] but explores the motion of particles in a central potential. In this case
the central potential is the result of the Galaxy being situated at the center
of a spherically symmetrical isotropic distribution comprising all matter in the
Universe.
This paper is preceded by Hartnett [10] that forms the basis of the work
presented here. Also Oliveira and Hartnett [8] progressed the work by developing
a density function for higher redshifts. Those paper assumed the unbounded
model. The reader should be familiar with Hartnett [10] at least before reading
this.
1.1 Cosmological General Relativity
The metric [2, 3, 5] used by Carmeli (in CGR) in a generally covariant theory
extends the number of dimensions of the Universe by the addition of a new
dimension – the radial velocity of the galaxies in the Hubble flow. The Hubble
law is assumed as a fundamental axiom for the Universe and the galaxies are
distributed accordingly. The underlying mechanism is that the substance of
which space is built, the vacuum, is uniformly expanding in all directions and
galaxies, as tracers, are fixed to space and therefore the redshifts of distant first
ranked galaxies quantify the speed of the expansion.
In determining the large scale structure of the Universe the usual time dimension is neglected (dt = 0) as observations are taken over such a short time
period compared to the motion of the galaxies in the expansion. It is like
taking a still snap shot of the Universe and therefore only four co-ordinates
x
µ = (x
1
, x2
, x3
, x4
) = (r, θ, φ, τv) are used – three of space and one of velocity.
The parameter τ, the Hubble-Carmeli constant, is a universal constant for all
observers.
Here the CGR theory is considered using a Riemannian four-dimensional
presentation of gravitation in which the coordinates are those of Hubble, i.e.
distance and velocity. This results in a phase space equation where the observables are redshift and distance. The latter may be determined from the
high-redshift type Ia supernova observations.
1.2 Phase space equation
The line element in CGR [6]
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 − R
2
(dθ2 + sin2
θdφ2
), (1)
represents a spherically symmetrical isotropic universe, that is not necessarily
homogeneous.
It is fundamental to the theory that ds = 0. In the case of Cosmological
Special Relativity (see chap.2 of [5]), which is very useful pedagogically, we can
2
write the line element as
ds2 = τ
2
dv2 − dr2
, (2)
ignoring θ and φ co-ordinates for the moment. By equating ds = 0 it follows
from (2) that τ dv = dr assuming the positive sign for an expanding universe.
This is then the Hubble law in the small v limit. Hence, in general, this theory
requires that ds = 0.
Using spherical coordinates (r, θ, φ) and the isotropy condition dθ = dφ = 0
in (1) then dr represents the radial co-ordinate distance to the source and it
follows from (1) that
τ
2
dv2 − e
ξ
dr2 = 0, (3)
where ξ is a function of v and r alone. This results in
dr
dv = τe−ξ/2
, (4)
where the positive sign has been chosen for an expanding universe.
2 Solution in central potential
Carmeli found a solution to his field equations, modified from Einstein’s, (see
[10] and [2, 5, 6]) which is of the form
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r)
(5)
with R′ = 1, which must be positive. From the field equations and (5) we get a
differential equation
f
′ +
f
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r, (6)
where f(r) is function of r and satisfies the condition f(r)+ 1 > 0. The prime is
the derivative with respect to r. Here κ = 8πG/c2
τ
2 and ρef f = ρ − ρc where ρ
is the averaged matter density of the Universe and ρc = 3/8πGτ 2
is the critical
density.
The solution of (6), f(r), is the sum of the solution (2GM/c2
r) to the homogeneous equation and a particular solution (- κ
3
τ
2ρef f r
2
) to the inhomogeneous
equation. In [5] Carmeli discarded the homogeneous solution saying it was not
relevant to the Universe, but the solution of a particle at the origin of coordinates, or in other words, in a central potential.
Now suppose we model the Universe as a ball of dust of radius ∆ with us, the
observer, at the center of that ball. In this case the gravitational potential written in spherical coordinates that satisfies Poisson’s equation in the Newtonian
approximation is
Φ(r) = −
GM
r
(7)
3
for the vacuum solution, but inside an isotropic matter distribution
Φ(r) = −G
4πρ
r
Z r
0
r
′2
dr′ + 4πρ Z ∆
r
r
′
dr′
!
=
2
3
Gπρr2 − 2Gπρ∆2
, (8)
where it is assumed the matter density ρ is uniform throughout the Universe.
At the origin (r = 0) Φ(0) = −2Gπρm∆2
, where ρ = ρm the matter density at
the present epoch. In general ρ depends on epoch. Because we are considering
no time development ρ is only a function of redshift z and ρm can be considered
constant.
From (8) it is clear to see that by considering a finite distribution of matter
of radial extent ∆, it has the effect of adding a constant to f(r) that is consistent
with the constant 2Gπρ∆2
in (8), where f(r) is now identified with −4Φ/c2
.
Equation (5) is essentially Carmeli’s equation A.19, the solution to his equation A.17 from p.122 of [5]. More generally (5) can be written as
e
ξ =
R′2
1 + f(r) − K
, (9)
where K is a constant. This is the most general form of the solution of Carmeli’s
equation A.17. So by substituting (9) into Carmeli’s A.18, A.21 becomes instead
1
RR′
(2R˙ R˙′ − f
′
) + 1
R2
(R˙ 2 − f + K) = κτ 2
ρef f . (10)
Therefore (9) is also a valid solution of the Einstein field equations (A.12 -
A.18 [5]) in this model. Making the assignment R = r in (10) yields a more
general version of (6), that is,
f
′ +
f − K
r
= −κτ 2
ρef f r. (11)
The solution of (11) is then
f(r) = −
1
3
κτ 2
ρef f r
2 + K. (12)
From a comparison with (8) it would seem that the constant K takes the form
K = 8πGρef f (0)∆2/c2
. It is independent of r and describes a non-zero gravitational potential of a finite universe measured at the origin of coordinates. There
is some ambiguity however as to which density to use in Carmelian cosmology
since it is not the same as Newtonian theory. Here ρef f is used and evaluated
at r = 0.
In the above Carmelian theory it initially assumed that the Universe has
expanded over time and at any given epoch it has an averaged density ρ, and
hence ρef f . The solution of the field equations has been sought on this basis.
4
However because the Carmeli metric is solved in an instant of time (on a cosmological scale) any time dependence is neglected. In fact, the general time
dependent solution has not yet been found. But since we observe the expanding
Universe with the coordinates of Hubble at each epoch (or redshift z) we see the
Universe with a different density ρ(z) and an effective density ρef f (z). Carmeli
arrived at his solution with the constant density assumption. I have made the
implicit assumption that the solution is also valid if we allow the density to vary
as a function of redshift, as is expected with expansion.
Now it follows from (4), (9) and (12) that
dr
dv = τ
s
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2, (13)
where Ω = ρ/ρc. This compares with the solution when the central potential is
neglected (i.e. ∆ → 0). In fact, the result is identical as we would expect in a
universe where the Hubble law is universally true.
Therefore (13) may be integrated exactly and yields the same result as
Carmeli,
r
cτ
=
sinh( v
c
√
1 − Ω)
√
1 − Ω
. (14)
Since observations in the distant cosmos are always in terms of redshift, z,
we write (14) as a function of redshift where r is expressed in units of cτ and
v/c = ((1 + z)
2 − 1)/((1 + z)
2 + 1) from the relativistic Doppler formula. The
latter is appropriate since this is a velocity dimension.
What is important to note though is that regardless of the geometry of the
Universe, provided it is spherically symmetrical and isotropic on the large scale,
(14) is identical to that we would get where the Universe has a unique center,
with one difference which is explored in the following section. For an isotropic
universe without a unique center, one can have an arbitrary number of centers.
However if we are currently in a universe where the Galaxy is at the center of
the local isotropy distribution this means the Universe we see must be very large
and we are currently limited from seeing into an adjacent region with a different
isotropy center.
3 Gravitational Redshift
In Hartnett [10] the geometry in the model is the usual unbounded type, as
found in an infinite universe, for example. In a finite bounded universe, an
additional effect may result from the photons being received from the distant
sources. The gravitational redshift (zgrav) resulting from the Galaxy sitting at
the unique center of a finite spherically symmetrical matter distribution must
be considered. In this case we need to consider the difference in gravitational
potential between the points of emission and reception of a photon. Now the
00th metric component, the time part of the 5D metric of coordinates x
k =
t, r, θ, φ, v (k = 0 − 4), is required but it has never been determined for the
5
cosmos in the Carmelian theory. In general relativity we would relate it by
g00 = 1 − 4Φ/c2 where −4Φ is the gravitational potential. The factor 4 and
minus sign arise from the Carmelian theory when (12) and (8) are compared.
So the question must be answered, “What is g00 metric component for the large
scale structure of the universe in CGR?”
First note from (5) and (6) the g11 metric component (considered in an
unbounded universe for the moment)
g11 = −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
(15)
in CGR we can write a scale radius
R =
cτ
p
|1 − Ω|
. (16)
Hence we can define an energy density from the curvature
ΩK =
c
2
h
2R2
=
c
2
τ
2
R2
, (17)
which, when we use (16), becomes
ΩK = 1 − Ω. (18)
This quantifies the energy in the curved spacevelocity.
In the FRW theory the energy density of the cosmological constant is defined
ρΛ = Λ/8πG hence
ΩΛ =
Λ
3H2
0
. (19)
Even though the cosmological constant is not explicitly used in CGR, it follows
from the definition of the critical density that
ρc =
3
8πGτ 2
=
Λ
8πG, (20)
when the cosmological constant Λ is identified with 3/τ 2
. Therefore in CGR it
follows that
ΩΛ =
Λ
3h
2
= Λ
τ
2
3
= 1. (21)
This means that in CGR the vacuum energy ρvac = Λ/8πG is encoded in the
metric via the critical density since ρef f = ρ−ρc principally defines the physics.
So ΩΛ = 1 identically and at all epochs of time. (The determination of ΩΛ in
[10] was flawed due to an incorrect definition.) Also we can relate ΩΛ to the
curvature density by
ΩK = ΩΛ − Ω, (22)
which becomes
Ωk = ΩΛ − Ωm, (23)
6
at the present epoch (z ≈ 0). Here Ω = Ωm(1 + z)
3 and hence ΩK → Ωk as
z → 0.
Finally we can write for the total energy density, the sum of the matter
density and the curvature density,
Ωt = Ω + ΩK = Ω + 1 − Ω = 1, (24)
which means the present epoch value is trivially
Ω0 = Ωm + Ωk = Ωm + 1 − Ωm = 1. (25)
This means that the 3D spatial part of the Universe is always flat as it expands.
This explains why we live in a universe that we observe to be identically geometrically spatially flat. The curvature is due to the velocity dimension. Only
at some past epoch, in a radiation dominated universe, with radiation energy
density ΩR(1 + z)
4
, would the total mass/energy density depart from unity.
Now considering a finite bounded universe, from (12), using Ω = ρ/ρc, I
therefore write g00 as
g00(r) = 1 + (1 − Ωt)r
2 + 3(Ωt − 1)∆2
, (26)
where r and ∆ are expressed in units of cτ. Equation (26) follows from g00 =
1 − 4Φ/c2 where Φ is taken from the gravitational potential but with effective
density, which in turn involves the total energy density because we are now
considering spacetime.
Clearly from (24) it follows that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch. Thus from
the usual relativistic expression
1 + zgrav =
s
g00(0)
g00(r)
= 1, (27)
and the gravitational redshift is zero regardless of epoch. As expected if the
emission and reception of a photon both occur in flat space then we’d expect
no gravitational effects.
In an unbounded universe, though no gravitational effects need be considered, the result g00 = 1 is also the same. Therefore we can write down the
full 5D line element for CGR in any dynamic spherically symmetrical isotropic
universe,
ds2 = c
2
dt2 −
1 +
1 − Ω
c
2τ
2
r
2
−1
dr2 + τ
2
dv2
. (28)
The θ and φ coordinates do not appear due to the isotropy condition dθ = dφ =
0. Due to the Hubble law the 2nd and 3rd terms sum to zero leaving dt = ds/c,
the proper time. Clocks, co-moving with the galaxies in the Hubble expansion,
would measure the same proper time.
Since it follows from (26) that g00(r) = 1 regardless of epoch, g00(r) is not
sensitive to any value of ∆. This means the above analysis is true regardless
7
of whether the universe is bounded or unbounded. The observations cannot
distinguish. In an unbounded or bounded universe of any type no gravitational
redshift (due to cosmological causes) in light from distant source galaxies would
be observed.
However inside the Galaxy we expect the matter density to be much higher
than critical, ie Ωgalaxy ≫ 1 and the total mass/energy density can be written
Ω0|galaxy = Ωgalaxy + Ωk ≈ Ωgalaxy, (29)
because Ωk ≈ 1, since it is cosmologically determined. Therefore this explains
why the galaxy matter density only is appropriate when considering the Poisson
equation for galaxies.[11]
As a result inside a galaxy we can write
g00(r) = 1 + ΩK
r
2
c
2τ
2
+ Ωgalaxy
r
2
c
2τ
2
, (30)
in terms of densities at some past epoch. Depending on the mass density of the
galaxy, or cluster of galaxies, the value of g00 here changes. As we approach
larger and larger structures it mass density approaches that of the Universe as
a whole and g00 → 1 as we approach the largest scales of the Universe. Galaxies
in the cosmos then act only as local perturbations but have no effect on ΩK.
That depends only on the average mass density of the whole Universe, which
depends on epoch (z).
Equation (30) is in essence the same expression used on page 173 of Carmeli
[5] in his gravitational redshift formula rewritten here as
λ2
λ1
=
s
1 + ΩKr
2
2
/c2τ
2 − RS/r2
1 + ΩKr
2
1
/c2τ
2 − RS/r1
. (31)
involving a cosmological contribution (ΩKr
2/c2
τ
2
) and RS = 2GM/c2
, a local
contribution where the mass M is that of a compact object. The curvature
(ΩK) results from the averaged mass/energy density of the whole cosmos, which
determines how the galaxies ‘move’ but motions of particles within galaxies is
dominated by the mass of the galaxy and the masses of the compact objects
within. Therefore when considering the gravitational redshifts due to compact
objects we can neglect any cosmological effects, only the usual Schwarzschild
radius of the object need be considered. The cosmological contributions in (31)
are generally negligible. This then leads back to the realm of general relativity.
4 White Hole
Now if we assume the radial extent of a finite matter distribution at the current
epoch is equal to the current epoch scale radius, we can write
∆ = 1
√
Ωk
=
1
p
|1 − Ωm|
, (32)
8
expressed in units of cτ. In such a case, ∆ = 1.02 cτ if Ωm = 0.04 and
∆ = 1.01 cτ if Ωm = 0.02.
It is important to note also that in Carmeli’s unbounded model (14) describes
the redshift distance relationship but there is no central potential. In Hartnett
[10] and in Oliveira and Hartnett [8] equation (14) was curve fitted to the SNe
Ia data and was found to agree with Ωm = 0.02 − 0.04 without the inclusion of
dark matter or dark energy. Therefore the same conclusion must also apply to
the finite bounded model suggested here.
In order to achieve a fit to the data, using either the finite bounded or
unbounded models, the white hole solution of (6) or (11) must be chosen. The
sign of the terms in (12) means that the potential implicit in (12) is a potential
hill, not a potential well. Therefore the solution describes an expanding white
hole with the observer at the origin of the coordinates, the unique center of the
Universe. Only philosophically can this solution be rejected. Using the Carmeli
theory, the observational data cannot distinguish between finite bounded models
(∞ > ∆ ≥ cτ) and finite (∆ = 0) or infinite (∆ = ∞) unbounded models .
The physical meaning is that the solution, developed in this paper, represents
an expanding white hole centered on the Galaxy. The galaxies in the Universe
are spherically symmetrically distributed around the Galaxy. The observed
redshifts are the result of cosmological expansion alone.
Moreover if we assume ∆ ≈ cτ and Ωm = 0.04 then it can be shown [8] that
the Schwarzschild radius for the finite Universe
Rs ≈ Ωm∆ = 0.04 cτ. (33)
Therefore for a finite universe with ∆ ≈ cτ it follows that Rs ≈ 0.04 cτ ≈
200 M pc. Therefore an expanding finite bounded universe can be considered to
be a white hole. As it expands the matter enclosed within the Schwarzschild
radius gets less and less. The gravitational radius of that matter therefore
shrinks towards the Earth at the center.
This is similar to the theoretical result obtained by Smoller and Temple [14]
who constructed a new cosmology from the FRW metric but with a shock wave
causing a time reversal white hole. In their model the total mass behind the
shock decreases as the shock wave expands, which is spherically symmetrically
centered on the Galaxy. Their paper states in part “...the entropy condition
implies that the shock wave must weaken to the point where it settles down
to an Oppenheimer Snyder interface, (bounding a finite total mass), that eventually emerges from the white hole event horizon of an ambient Schwarzschild
spacetime.”
This result then implies that the earth or at least the Galaxy is in fact close
to the physical center of the Universe. Smoller and Temple state [15] that “With
a shock wave present, the Copernican Principle is violated in the sense that the
earth then has a special position relative to the shock wave. But of course, in
these shock wave refinements of the FRW metric, there is a spacetime on the
other side of the shock wave, beyond the galaxies, and so the scale of uniformity
of the FRW metric, the scale on which the density of the galaxies is uniform, is
no longer the largest length scale”[emphasis added].
9
Their shock wave refinement of a critically expanding FRW metric leads to
a big bang universe of finite total mass. This model presented here also has a
finite total mass and is a spatially flat universe. It describes a finite bounded
white hole that started expanding at some time in the past.
5 Conclusion
Since the Carmeli theory has been successfully analyzed with distance modulus
data derived by the high-z type Ia supernova teams it must also be consistent
with a universe that places the Galaxy at the center of an spherically symmetrical isotropic expanding white hole of finite radius. The result describes particles
moving in both a central potential and an accelerating spherically expanding
universe without the need for the inclusion of dark matter. The data cannot be
used to exclude models with finite extensions ∆ ≥ cτ.
References
[1] P. Astier, et al “The Supernova Legacy Survey: Measurement of ΩM ,
ΩΛ and w from the first year data set”, Astron. Astrophys. (2005)
arXiv:astro-ph/0510447
[2] S. Behar, M. Carmeli, “Cosmological relativity: A new theory of cosmology”, Int. J. Theor. Phys. 39 (5): 1375–1396 (2000)
[3] M. Carmeli, “Cosmological General Relativity”, Commun. Theor. Phys.
5:159 (1996)
[4] M. Carmeli, “Is galaxy dark matter a property of spacetime?”, Int. J.
Theor. Phys. 37 (10): 2621–2625 (1998)
[5] M. Carmeli, Cosmological Special Relativity (World Scientific, Singapore,
2002)
[6] M. Carmeli, “Accelerating Universe: Theory versus Experiment”, [arXiv:
astro-ph/0205396] (2002)
[7] M. Carmeli, J.G. Hartnett, F.J. Oliveira, “The cosmic time in terms of the
redshift,” Found. Phys. Lett. 19(3):277–283 (2006) arXiv:gr-qc/0506079
[8] F.J. Oliveira, J.G. Hartnett, “Carmeli’s cosmology fits data for an accelerating and decelerating universe without dark matter nor dark energy,”
Found. Phys. Lett. 19(6):519-535 (2006) arXiv: astro-ph/0603500
[9] W.W. Gibbs, “Profile: George F. R. Ellis”, Scientific American 273(4):
28-29 (1995)
10
[10] J.G. Hartnett, “The distance modulus determined from Carmeli’s cosmology fits the accelerating universe data of the high-redshift type Ia
supernovae without dark matter,” Found. Phys. 36(6): 839–861 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0501526
[11] Hartnett, J.G. “Spiral galaxy rotation curves determined from Carmelian
general relativity” Int. J. Theor. Phys. 45(11):2147–2165 (2006)
arXiv:astro-ph/0511756
[12] R.A. Knop, et al, “New constraints on ΩM , ΩΛ and w from an independent set of 11 high-redshift supernovae observed with the Hubble Space
Telescope”, Ap. J. 598: 102–137 (2003)
[13] A.G. Riess, et al, “Type Ia supernovae discoveries at z > 1 from the Hubble
Space Telescope: Evidence for past deceleration and constraints on dark
energy evolution” Ap. J. 607: 665–687 (2004)
[14] J. Smoller and B. Temple, PNAS 100(20): 11216–11218 (2003)
[15] J. Smoller and B. Temple, http://www.math.ucdavis.edu/∼temple/articles/temple1234.pdf"
If we are comparing ourselves to any standard other than the one set by Jesus, we are doing it wrong.
So many people compare themselves to other people and therefore feel good about themselves because they are better than that other person in whatever area they have chosen to look at. In many cases that person is better in another area, but even if they aren't, that is the wrong standard. The only rightful standard is Jesus and the Bible, his word.
Florida Will Allow Far Right PragerU Materials in Public Schools
* founded 2009 by right-wing radio host Dennis Prager
* pushes anti-immigrant theories
* downplays role of racism in U.S. history/modern society
* embraces Christian nationalism
* disputes climate change
* denies inequalities based on gender, race, sexuality
* promotes capitalist/imperialist ideology
https://persagen.com >> PragerU
#Florida #PragerU #disinformation #ChristianRight #ConspiracyTheories
PragerU is not far right. It is traditional American.
I think that is a stretch, but it is definitely an interesting theory. I'll keep an eye out to see if it could come true.
"There is no such thing as a small sin. They are all vast and stupendous, because they will all have to come under inspection in the day of judgment."
—De Witt Talmage
#biblestr #christian #sin #quote #dayofjudgement #dayofsalvation #nostr
https://nostrcheck.me/media/public/nostrcheck.me_1954363753857711631690556475.webp
And the greatest sin of all is to deny the creator God and the savior God, Jesus.



