The
Big Bang Theory Collapses

by Duane T. Gish, Ph.D.*
Institute for Creation
Research, PO Box 2667, El Cajon, CA 92021
Voice: (619) 448-0900 FAX: (619) 448-3469
URL = www.ICR.org
"Vital Articles on
Science/Creation" June 1991
Copyright © 1991 All Rights Reserved
"Down with the Big Bang;" "The
Big Bang Theory Goes Kerplooey;" "The Big Bang Theory Explodes;"
"Sorry, Big Bang Theory is a Dud;" "Map Challenges Theory of
Universe;" "Astronomers' New Data Jolt Vital Part of Big Bang Theory;"
"Quasar Clumps Dim Cosmological Theory." These have been titles of a few of the
articles found in newspapers and science journals in the last two or three years, as the
Big Bang theory has received one body blow after another. And why not? We know that the
universe did not begin with a big bang -- it will end with a big bang, for "but the
day of the Lord will come as a thief in the night; in the which the heavens shall pass
away with a great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and
the works that are therein shall be burned up" (II Peter 3:10). Cosmologists have
thus miserably failed as to the time, nature, and cause of the Big Bang.
The Big Bang theory concerning the origin of
the universe was spawned about 50 years ago, and soon became the dogma of the evolutionary
establishment. It has had many dissenters, however, including the British astronomer Sir
Fred Hoyle, the Nobel laureate Hannes Alfven, and astronomers Geoffrey Burbidge and Halton
Arp. According to the Big Bang theory, some 10 to 20 billion years ago, all of the matter
and energy of the universe was compressed into a cosmic egg, or plasma ball, consisting of
sub-atomic particles and radiation. Nobody knows where the cosmic egg came from, or how it
got there -- it was just there. For some equally inexplicable reason, the cosmic egg
exploded. As the matter and radiation expanded, so the theory says, it cooled sufficiently
for elements to form, as protons and electrons combined to form hydrogen of atomic weight
one, and neutrons were subsequently captured to form helium of atomic weight four. Most of
the gas that formed consisted of hydrogen. These gases, it is then supposed, expanded
radially in all directions throughout the universe until they were so highly dispersed
that an extremely low vacuum and temperature existed. No oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus,
carbon, sulfur, copper, iron, nickel, uranium, or other elements existed. The universe
consisted essentially of hydrogen gas. Then somehow, we are told, the molecules of gas
that were racing out at an enormous speed in a radial direction began to collapse in on
themselves in local areas by gravitational attraction. The molecules within a space of
about six trillion miles diameter collapsed to form each star, a hundred billion stars
somehow collected to form each of the estimated 100 billion galaxies in the universe, and
our own solar system formed about five billion years or so ago from a cloud of dust and
gas made up of the exploded remnants of previously existing stars. No satisfactory theory
exists to explain any of these events, but cosmologists remained firm in their conviction
that all of these marvelous events would eventually yield to credible explanations. But
now a cruel fate has befallen the grandest theory of all -- the Big Bang theory.
Based on the Big Bang theory, cosmologists
predicted that the distribution of matter throughout the universe would be homogeneous.
Thus, based upon the so-called Cosmological Principle, it was postulated that the
distribution of galaxies in the universe would be essentially uniform. No matter in which
direction one looked, if one looked far enough, one would see the same number of galaxies.
There would be no large scale clusters of galaxies or great voids in space. Recent
research, however, has revealed massive superclusters of galaxies and vast voids in space.
We exist in a very "clumpy" universe.
The present crisis in Big Bang cosmologies
began in 1986, when R. Brent Tully, of the University of Hawaii, showed that there were
ribbons of superclusters of galaxies 300 million light-years long and 100 million
light-years thick, stretching out about a billion light-years, and separated by voids
about 300 million light-years across.[1] These structures are much too big for the Big
Bang theory to produce. At the speeds at which galaxies are supposed to be moving, it
would require 80 billion years to create such a huge complex, but the age of the universe
is supposed to be somewhere between 10 and 20 billion years.
In November of 1989, Margaret Geller and John
Huchra, of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, announced the results of their
research. Their map of the sky revealed what they termed the "Great Wall" -- a
huge sheet of galaxies 200 million light years across and 700 million light years long.[2]
A team of American, British, and Hungarian astronomers, it is reported, discovered even
larger structures.[3] They found galaxies clustered into thin bands spaced about 600
millon light years apart. The pattern of these clusters stretched across about one-fourth
of the diameter of the universe, or about seven billion light years. This huge shell and
void pattern would have required nearly 150 billion years to form, based on their speed of
movement, if produced by the standard Big Bang cosmology.
Even more recently (January 3, 1991), Will
Saunders and nine fellow astronomers published the results of their all-sky redshift
survey of galaxies detected by the Infrared Astronomical Satellite. This survey revealed
the existence of a far-greater number of massive superclusters of galaxies than can be
accounted for by Big Bang cosmologies.[4]
In an attempt to salvage the Big Bang theory,
cosmologists have invented hypotheses to explain the failures of their hypotheses. One of
these is the Cold Dark Matter (CDM) theory. According to this theory, 90-99% of the matter
in the universe cannot be detected. If CDM existed, it would supply sufficient
gravitational pull to create large clusters of galaxies. The structures discovered during
the past few years, however, are so massive that even if CDM did exist, it could not
account for their formation. Saunders and co-workers thus state that the CDM model can be
ruled out to at least the 97% confidence level. In the same issue of Nature, in which is
found the article by Saunders, et al, there appears an article by David Lindley in the
"News and Views" section (p. 14) entitled "Cold Dark Matter Makes an
Exit." Caltech cosmologist S. George Djorgovski, taking into account the astronomical
observations that contradict the CDM theory, states that the demise of the notion of the
existence of cold dark matter is inevitable.[5]
Also very recently, the U.S.-European
Roentgen Satellite (ROSAT), detecting x-ray emissions, discovered evidence of giant
superclusters of quasars on the edge of the universe, supposedly eight to 12 billion light
years from the earth.[6] Physicist Paul Steinhardt, of the University of Pennsylvania,
states that "This may be the start of the death knell of the cold-dark-matter theory.
" Even if this hypothetical matter existed, it still could not explain the existence
of these giant clusters of quasars.
If all of this weren't bad enough news for
Big Bang cosmologists, results from the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) should really
make them wish they had gone into some other field. Based on the Big Bang theory, it was
predicted that there should exist a background radiation equivalent to a few degrees
Kelvin. Sure enough, in 1965, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, radio engineers at Bell
Telephone Laboratories in New Jersey, discovered a microwave background radiation of 2.7°
<!#P6MJ239><!#P255DJ0>K. Evolutionary cosmologists were absolutely delighted.
This discovery was considered proof of the Big Bang, and Penzias and Wilson were duly
awarded Nobel Prizes. It now appears, however, that the background radiation may turn out
to be additional evidence against the Big Bang theory, rather than its proof.
Since the Big Bang theory predicted a
homogeneous universe with matter evenly distributed throughout the universe (which it most
certainly is not, as described above), evolutionary cosmologists expected that the
background radiation would be perfectly smooth. That is, no matter in which direction one
looked, the background radiation would be the same. Just as predicted, the background
radiation was perfectly smooth. Theorists were delighted, smug in the assurance that this
background radiation was the leftover whimper of the Big Bang. Now, however, it turns out
that the universe is not homogeneous, but is extremely lumpy, with massive superclusters
of galaxies and great voids in space. Thus , if the background radiation is left over from
the Big Bang, it should not be smooth, but should be more intense in certain directions
than in others, indicating inhomogeneities at the very start of the universe, immediately
following the initial moments of the Big Bang. Astronomers thus began to search for
differences in the background radiations. All measurements showed it to be perfectly
smooth. Thus COBE was launched to an orbit 559 miles above the earth, carrying sensitive
instruments to measure the background radiation. Alas, preliminary data from COBE
announced in January, show absolutely no evidence of inhomogeneity in the background
radiation. It is perfectly smooth.[7]
"No energetic processes, even unknown
ones, could have occurred that were vigorous enough to either create the large-scale
structures astronomers have observed or stop their headlong motion once created. There is
simply no way to form these structures in the 20 billion years since the Big
Bang."[8]
Of course, the demise of the Big Bang theory
will not discourage evolutionary theorists from proposing other theories. In fact,
theories based on plasma processes and a revised steady-state theory have already been
advanced to replace Big Bang cosmologies."[9],[10],[11]
Eventually, all such theories
will fail, for "in the beginning God created the heaven and the earth" (Genesis
1:1). "The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament showeth His
handiwork" (Psalm 19:1).
-- References --
- R. B. Tully, Astrophysics Journal
303:25-38 (1986).
- M. J. Geller and J. P. Huchra, Science
246:897-903 (1990).
- E. G. Lerner, Aerospace America, March
1990, pp. 38-43.
- Will Saunders, et al, Nature 349:32-38
(1991).
- T. H. Maugh, II, Los Angeles Times, San
Diego Edition, January 5, 1991, p. A29.
- R. Cowen, Science News 139:52 (1991).
- Reference 3, p. 41.
- Reference 3, p. 42.
- Reference 3, p. 43.
- A. L. Peratt, The Sciences,
January/February 1990, p. 24.
- H. C. Arp, G. Burbidge, F. Hoyle, J. V.
Narlikar, and N. C. Wickramasinghe, Nature 346:807-812 (1990).
* Dr. Duane T. Gish is Vice-President of
the Institute for Creation Research
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