The New Redshift Interpretation Affirmed
In late 1997 I reported (Mod. Phys. Lett. A 12 (1997) 2919; astro-ph/9806280) the discovery of A New Redshift Interpretation (NRI) of the Hubble relation and the 2.7K CBR, which showed for the first time that it was possible to explain these phenomena within the framework of a universe governed by E...
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Zusammenfassung: | In late 1997 I reported (Mod. Phys. Lett. A 12 (1997) 2919; astro-ph/9806280)
the discovery of A New Redshift Interpretation (NRI) of the Hubble relation and
the 2.7K CBR, which showed for the first time that it was possible to explain
these phenomena within the framework of a universe governed by Einstein's
static-spacetime general relativity (GR) instead of the Friedmann-Lemaitre
expanding-spacetime paradigm. More recently Carlip and Scranton
(astro-ph/9808021; C&S) claim to find flaws in this discovery, while also
claiming the standard cosmology is error free. Their analysis assumes the NRI
represents a static cosmological model of the universe. This is wrong. My MPLA
report clearly states the NRI encompasses an expanding universe wherein
galaxies are undergoing Doppler recession due to vacuum density repulsion.
C&S's confusion on this crucial point leads to serious errors in their
analysis. Next, in claiming the standard cosmology is error free, C&S fail to
respond to the contradictory evidence in my preprint, gr-qc/9806061. There I
first show why the universe is governed by Einstein static-spacetime GR, and
not the Friedmann-Lemaitre expanding spacetime paradigm on which Big Bang
cosmology is critically hinged. Secondly, I note a most embarrassing fact about
the F-L paradigm--namely, that it has always involved gargantuan
nonconservation-of-energy losses amounting to the mass equivalent of about
thirty million universes, each with a mass of 10^21 suns. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.physics/9810051 |