Godfree wrote:" why can we see large old galaxies in our oldest images ",,???
tillingborn wrote:We can’t. The oldest image we have is the cosmic background radiation. The r
Godfree wrote:We can , at 10 billion light years we have thousands of galaxies , some red and dead , do the research yourself ,red and dead , at 10 billion light years ,?
The research I've done suggests that the oldest galaxy so far discovered is older than 10 billion years, but less than the cosmic microwave background which is currently the oldest picture we have of the universe. Perhaps I'm gullible, but I believe that the findings of the Cosmic background explorer really do show the aftermath of a very large explosion. What I said above continued:
tillingborn wrote:(The r)eason we have galaxies in our oldest images in the visible spectrum is that they are the only things big enough to see from such a distance. The most distant one is about 12.91billion light years away, giving it at least, 800million years to form; more if you take the expansion of space into account.
Godfree wrote:galaxies tend to be flat or ball shaped , ball shaped ones are thought to be the product of many galaxies coming together , they are much older and bigger , we can see those at 10 billion light years ,
At 10 billion light years there isn't the resolution to tell what shape galaxies are.
Godfree wrote:Recently on DW tv , German News Journal , the reporter made my claim ,
the observational data does not fit the bbt ,
If a journalist said it, it must be true.
Godfree wrote:So tillingborn ,,,the nothing ,
how do we make a universe from nothing ,,??? answer please ,
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Godfree wrote:I can give you my answer now , you can't make a universe from nothing ,
therefore it didn't happen , what did happen was a continuation of the previous cycle , and on a galactic scale not a universal one ,
Well you say I can't have nothing, I say you can't have infinity. Nonetheless we have a universe; bit of a Kantian antinomy, eh?
Godfree wrote:Bangs happen on a galactic scale ,
Is there anything you can point to in the local 10 billion light years that supports this claim?
Godfree wrote:the universe is filled with hydrogen ,
Well intergalactic space, which frankly is the vast majority of the universe, is reckoned to contain one atom of hydrogen per cubic metre
Godfree wrote:where did all the hydrogen come from ,??
if Stars burn it what makes it ,,?????
See above.
Godfree wrote:black holes go bang , or pop or something , to release the hydrogen ,
the crushing power of a black hole returns matter to it's single component ,
a hydrogen molecule , and we have our cycle ,,,your turn ,,!!!
Do you have any evidence of black holes going bang, pop or wam-pop-a-loo-bop-a-lop-bam-boom? It's a bit ad hoc Godfree.
I've got some punctuation left over, would you like it,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,???????????????????!!!!!! .