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What is clear from the Planck investigation is that the simplest models for how the super-rapid expansion might have worked are probably no longer tenable, suggesting some exotic physics will eventually be needed to explain it.

“We’re now being pushed into a parameter space we didn’t expect to be in,” said collaboration scientist Dr Andrew Jaffe from Imperial College, UK. “That’s OK. We like interesting physics; that’s why we’re physicists, so there’s no problem with that. It’s just we had this naïve expectation that the simplest answer would be right, and sometimes it just isn’t.”


2 posted on 02/05/2015 1:59:00 PM PST by NormsRevenge (Semper Fi - Revolution is a'brewin!!!)
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To: NormsRevenge
What happened to special relativity during the rapid expansion, ie, the mass of the matter as it was expanding at the speed of light (or close to it). That is a lot of matter moving across a very large space and very quickly too.

Obviously I don't understand but to get to where we (the mass of from supernova) are today looking back towards the origins of the universe means that matter had move across a very large space very quickly.

Space warp? Lol.

12 posted on 02/05/2015 2:26:54 PM PST by dhs12345
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To: NormsRevenge

The latest polarization images resemble sunlight cast from the chrome rims of my spinning bicycle wheel. It is possible that the fossil “light” being observed is cast from a torus or ring, like the death star in the remastered version of Star Wars. To be the “big bang,” the original (older in either case) version of the death star explosion is needed.


18 posted on 02/07/2015 2:37:13 PM PST by Richard McBroom
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