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Remote Rotating Disk Raises Big Bang Eyebrows

Aaron

Member
Site Supporter
Most Distant Rotating Disk Galaxy Challenges Secular Models


Big Bang astronomers assume that light from a galaxy billions of light-years away requires billions of years to reach us. While this may seem reasonable, creation scientists question this assumption. By Big Bang reckoning, this means that we are seeing these distant objects, not as they are now, but as they were billions of years ago. Therefore Big Bang astronomers expect these distant galaxies to be “immature,” not having time to “evolve.” However, they have repeatedly been surprised by distant galaxies that are more “mature” than expected by Big Bang reckoning. As reported by the ALMA press release,

In most galaxy formation scenarios, galaxies only start to show a well-formed disk around 6 billion years after the Big Bang. The fact that the astronomers found such a disk galaxy when the Universe was only ten percent of its current age, indicates that other growth processes must have dominated.​

Or perhaps it illustrates that something is wrong with secular ideas about galaxy formation. Or that something is wrong with the assumption that distant light takes billions of years to reach us. Or perhaps both.​
 

37818

Well-Known Member
I suspect the universe is much older than the big bang measures their age. As time goes by I suspect the measured age of the "big bang" universe will be younger than it's current measured age. Time will tell.
 

Scott Downey

Well-Known Member
Thing is why is God constrained by time. Example, when He created Adam and Eve they were full grown adults... God could have created a full grown universe of galaxies and their light, with no time needed for them to evolve.

God calls things that are not into being as they are. But too many people think everything has to evolve over extreme periods of time
 

Van

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
I suspect the universe is much older than the big bang measures their age. As time goes by I suspect the measured age of the "big bang" universe will be younger than it's current measured age. Time will tell.
I think you meant the universe was probably created less than 14 billion years ago. If so, I agree.
 
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