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Big Bang

Name: Anonymous 2007-05-21 19:00 ID:LmnW8hZq

Ask me anything about and I'm sure that I can answer it.

Name: Anonymous 2007-05-28 18:41 ID:8tqQ6H0l

Questions for those who believe the "Big Bang Theory":

- If planets were formed by many small collisions, the impacts would be largely self-cancelling, and the planets would not spin.

- If the solar system formed from a swirling cloud of stellar matter, all planets would orbit the sun in the same direction.

- Gas dissipates rapidly in a vacuum, rendering the formation of gaseous planets like Jupiter and Saturn impossible. (This fact alone renders the theory for the formation of the planets completely invalid)

- If the big bang theory was true, all the planets in the solar system would have largely similar chemical composition. However, there is enormous diversity among planets.

- The big bang cannot explain the formation of 'rings', such as those of Saturn.

- Scientists agree the universe had a beginning, called 'singularity.' The means that there was nothing in the beginning, suggesting that first there was nothing ... then it exploded.

- If solar system formed as the big bang theory suggests, all planets would also rotate in the same direction. Pluto and Venus rotate backwards. Uranus is tipped on its side, and rotates like a wheel.

- The big bang theory indicates that all the planets' moons should orbit in the same sense, but there are at least 6 moons with backwards orbits. Also, Neptune, Saturn, and Jupiter have moons orbiting in both directions.

- The big bang theory fails miserably at explaining why the Earth and it's moon have such a dissimilar composition.



That pretty well mops the floor with the Big Bang theory. Most of the above points are not only unexplained, but *contradicted* by the big bang theory, which could adequately be dubbed "A Fairy Tale for Physicists."

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