20230110

Shocking News IV: Diversity of Distant Galaxies Similar to Local Galaxies as Predicted by Infinite Universe Theory

 

PSI Blog 20230110 Shocking News IV: Diversity of Distant Galaxies Similar to Local Galaxies as Predicted by Infinite Universe Theory


Yet another study fails to find evidence for universal “younging” predicted by the Big Bang Theory in 850 James Webb Space Telescope photos.

 

“This image—a mosaic of 690 individual frames taken with the Near Infrared Camera (NIRCam) on the James Webb Space Telescope—covers an area of sky about eight times as large as Webb’s First Deep Field Image released on July 12. It’s from a patch of sky near the handle of the Big Dipper. This is one of the first images obtained by the Cosmic Evolution Early Release Science Survey (CEERS) collaboration. It contains several examples of high redshift galaxies with various morphologies. Credit: NASA/STScI/CEERS/TACC/S. Finkelstein/M. Bagley/Z. Levay; Cutout images: NASA/STScI/CEERS/TACC/S. Finkelstein/M. Bagley/J. Kartaltepe” (Auburn, 2023).


Cosmogonists (those who assume the universe had a beginning) predicted we would see the “early universe” in photos of cosmic objects 13.8 billion light years distant. The James Webb Space Telescope attempted to do just that. Unfortunately, the predicted evidence for young stuff (empty space, dust clouds, or proto-stars) did not appear. Instead, fully-formed galaxies were obvious, and by no means young. Some even were spirals like our own Milky Way, which is 13.6-billion-years-old. All this is just another falsification of the Big Bang Theory.

 

Here is a nice quote from the senior author of the latest study:

 

‘“There have been previous studies emphasizing that we see a lot of galaxies with disks at high redshift, which is true, but in this study we also see a lot of galaxies with other structures, such as spheroids and irregular shapes, as we do at lower redshifts,” said Kartaltepe, lead author on the paper and CEERS co-investigator. “This means that even at these high redshifts, galaxies were already fairly evolved and had a wide range of structures.”’

 

Of course, as a cosmogonist, one always has to hold out hope:

 

‘“This tells us that we don’t yet know when the earliest galaxy structures formed,” said Kartaltepe. “We’re not yet seeing the very first galaxies with disks. We’ll have to examine a lot more galaxies at even higher redshifts to really quantify at what point in time features like disks were able to form.”’

 

Those quotes are from the short report linked below. If the “inflationary universe” ad hoc is any guide, cosmogonists invariably will come up with some “brilliant” excuse to save the theory. Of course, it just gets harder with each turn of the evidence machine. Sure will be nice when we can dump the Big Bang and clear our heads of all the nonsense.

 

Here is the link to reporter Auburn’s short summary of the study:    

 

James Webb Space Telescope study reveals wide diversity of galaxies in the early universe



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