Friday, May 14, 2010

God Recycles Everything












Did this genesis happen once? Was there one Big Bang when the universe, the Spirit, and everything started?

No. The universe is infinite in time and space. It regenerates itself infinitely.

Each galaxy is a wide gossamer net sprinkled with stars. Galaxies are the primary residents of the universe. They have life cycles not so different from animals, plants, and human beings, except a lot longer. They are born from seeds produced by parent galaxies in the form of what we call quasi stellar objects (quasars). The quasars are jetted out of the parent galaxy in a spinning jet whose spin is imparted from the spin of the parent galaxy. A new quasar becomes a black hole after long years of accretion. Quasars fly into empty space above and below the galaxy. Some Quasars accumulate mass and energy to become the core of protogalaxies, which in turn become full blown galaxies. As the galaxy evolves, in time, the Quasar accumulates enough mass to become a black hole.

The slowly rotating galactic net extends far beyond the visible extent of the galaxy and collects energy and matter with its subtle gravity. The energy adds mass to the galaxy by being absorbed by light atoms, bouncing electrons into higher orbits. Light atoms collect into large masses that evolve into stars, as described above. As they are compressed together in the protostars and stars, the light atoms combine into heavy atoms (citation), and so the galaxy grows and feeds the rotating black hole at the center. As the rotating matter falls toward the center, its angular momentum increases, and spins up the black hole. Over time the black hole rotates faster and faster, becoming wider and wider along the equator parallel to the equator of the galaxy.

So the galaxy grows, the matter flows toward the center, and the black hole evolves into a spinning flat disk. Eventually the flat disk reaches a critical rotational velocity. It becomes so thin that the predominant gravitation pull is along the equator and the gravitational component normal to the galaxy, along the poles of the galaxy, is weak. Very small perturbations are induced into the outer edges of the black hole due to uneven infalling matter from the nearby arms of the galaxy. These perturbations are communicated eventually to the weak center where very massive black hole material is destabilized. Wobble is induced into the core of the black hole. The wobble is not held in the vertical component as strongly as in the horizontal component. When the rotation reaches the critical velocity, the vertical component of gravity is no longer strong enough to resist the rising and falling vertical component of the core, and the core material is release along the vertical axis of the black hole and galaxy. The release is explosive due to the squeezing of mass toward the center of the black hole.

The jets fly out along the axis of the galaxy, carrying the spin and boring into unswept space above and below the galaxy. Thus are born two new dense quasars leaving a trail from their parents. The quasars are very dense but as they depart from the tight gravitation bottle of the black hole, they decompress. This is seen with the reduction over time and space of the gravitational redshift of the quasars.

Mature galaxies produce many such quasar jets with the younger ones, closer to the parent than the older ones. The older quasars lose density and energy, and thus their redshift becomes less. The younger ones have higher redshifts. Quasars decompress to the point that they are interpreted as Active Galactic Nuclei, which they in fact are: the nuclei of newly created young galaxies. Thus the compact ejecta evolves into a young spiral galaxy whose path can often be traced by its jet trail back to its parent galaxy.

It is easy to understand how astronomers interpret the varying redshifts as variations in distance, and so mistake the distance of quasars as being very different from their parent galaxies. Halton Arp has documented (citations) many instances of highly redshifted quasars connected physically to the parent galaxy by trails left by the jets. And these jet trails can be seen to extend out from mature galactic centers, populated with highly redshifted quasars close the centers, less redshifted quasars further out, Active Galactic Nuclei, and young galaxies even further out, all along the jet trail.

Of course galaxies vary in size, age, and density. Hence the components of the jets, though dense, are not always very massive. Sometimes they decompress into great wads of dust and knots of debris that resemble the flotsam and jetsam of a stagnant pond. These wads of material eventually appear as chaotic structures such as the Pillars of Hercules in the Eagle Nebula, and other such instances. These coalesce themselves over time and as local densities increase, stars are born.

This alternative view of the evolution of galaxies, their propagation, their absorptions of mass and energy can support the view that the universe regenerates itself forever, is not initiated by a Big Bang and will not follow the limited life cycle of the universe initiated by a Big Bang.
Not only is the universe infinite, it is more infinite than we can imagine.

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