How does the big bang theory explain old galaxies? - old bang busvideos
How do you explain all these old galaxies, which are well developed in the Hubble Deep Field at a time when the universe was very young, so they evolved?
Monday, December 7, 2009
Old Bang Busvideos How Does The Big Bang Theory Explain Old Galaxies?
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The galaxies old fields of depth shows not well formed. It shows what seems strange that young galaxies. The "old" well-educated are much narrower than the oddly shaped remote control.
We always try to work with a theory about cosmic galaxy far - we're not there yet, but it is a consistent theory that most cosmologists agree, at least partially.
The galaxies old fields of depth shows not well formed. It shows what seems strange that young galaxies. The "old" well-educated are much narrower than the oddly shaped remote control.
We always try to work with a theory about cosmic galaxy far - we're not there yet, but it is a consistent theory that most cosmologists agree, at least partially.
The galaxies old fields of depth shows not well formed. It shows what seems strange that young galaxies. The "old" well-educated are much narrower than the oddly shaped remote control.
We always try to work with a theory about cosmic galaxy far - we're not there yet, but it is a consistent theory that most cosmologists agree, at least partially.
If it does not show that at all ...
Because the astronomers did not even accept a theory of how galaxies form, how to make a statement like the universe is too young to have developed for them? Answer: No, it is obviously too old, and you're just repeating nonsense that you hear in a church meeting.
Young galaxies were once dark, strange form of gas. For millions, hardening into a collection of beautiful remnants or globular. Because the universe has no edge, the deeper we see is a fraction of the beginning.
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