Relativity and Cosmology

   

Uniformity in a Finite Universe

Authors: Ken Gonder

A finite universe that was uniform, homogeneous and isotropic at the largest scale, would exhibit a distinct visual pattern of galaxies arrayed across the sky that would confirm its finiteness. It'd have fewer galaxies when looking outward toward its perimeter and more galaxies when looking in the opposite direction inward toward its interior. But we don't see it. If it was expanding, cosmological redshift would correlate with the pattern. We don't see that either. This simple, obvious, undeniable fact of basic three-dimensional geometry by itself completely undermines big bang orthodoxy. But it remains unrecognized.

Comments: 6 Pages, 6 Diagrams

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Submission history

[v1] 2022-07-19 01:39:42
[v2] 2023-05-09 01:10:34
[v3] 2023-07-10 22:32:50
[v4] 2024-01-22 00:23:08

Unique-IP document downloads: 353 times

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