About
the Book
Our story of creation begins with the
evolution of life on earth, since our earth was formed 4.6 billion years
ago. Next the creation of our sun and other stars are described, along
with their eventual death. Finally we explore the greatest mystery of
all, the creation of our universe.
Most astronomers maintain that our
universe exploded with a Big Bang about 15 million years ago. Computer
studies of the Einstein General theory of Relativity are the foundation
for modern Big Bang research. These studies have predicted that our
universe began as a "singularity," in which the density of
matter was practically infinite. A noted authority has claimed that the
present observable universe (30 billion light years in diameter) was
"smaller than a dime" at the instant of the Big Bang.
Yet Einstein absolutely rejected
"singularity" predictions derived from his theory. He insisted
that, "singularities do not exist in physical reality." During
Einstein's lifetime, the Big Bang theory used the concept of George
Gamow, who postulated that the initial universe of tightly packed
neutrons and weighed 300 million tons per cubic centimeter, which Gamow
considered to be the greatest possible density of matter. With the Gamow
postulate, the observable universe would have just fit within the orbit
of Mars. It would have been 10 trillion times wider than is predicted by
modern Big Bang theories.
To add insight to this controversy, the
book explains the Einstein theory in simple yet scientifically accurate
terms that can be understood by the average reader. It also describes
the gravitational theory of Huseyin Yilmaz, which has refined the
Einstein theory ad has eliminated its singularity predictions. When
applied to cosmology, the Yilmaz theory predicts an infinitely old
"Steady State" universe, in which energy radiated from stars
in converted into diffuse matter that compensates for the universe
expansion.
Read
more
Ordering
Information
|
The Scientific Story of
Creation
Adrian Bjornson
Addison Press
Secure
Transaction
272 pp, Softcover, 35 illustrations
ISBN: 09703231-2-3
|