Monday, December 7, 2009

Old Bang Busvideos How Does The Big Bang Theory Explain Old Galaxies?

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?

6 comments:

The Lazy Astronomer said...

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 Lazy Astronomer said...

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 Lazy Astronomer said...

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.

cbirch92 said...

If it does not show that at all ...

José Frink said...

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.

Radius Maximus said...

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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