Astronomers
Don’t Know
What Astronomers Don’t
Know
By
Henry M. Morris, Ph.D.
Judging from the
number of published books and articles on the subject, there is a lot going on
in the field of evolutionary cosmogony as astronomers and cosmological
physicists are trying to learn how the universe originated and its various
components evolved, including all the millions of galaxies, stars, planets, and
other objects in the vast cosmos.
I try to scan two
dozen or more scientific journals each month, and it seems to me there is no
end to the speculative writings and researches on these topics.
Like "the
Lord's mercies" they
are "new every
morning" (Lamentations 3:22,23), though
hardly as beneficial.
As one scientist noted rather wistfully while eulogizing
science as a whole: Still,
even today certain major sciences offer scant prospect of practical
application. Astronomy and cosmology are of little earthly use.
That's a valid point,
though not completely true, of course. The visible stars have for centuries
been of great use in navigation, surveying, and chronometry.
But the distant stars
and galaxies, observable only through giant telescopes, have been of use only
in fueling speculations about the origin and evolution of the universe.
That also is the
primary motivation for the scientists of NASA and their space program, as they
are trying to determine how the earth and the solar system evolved, and even
how life began.
The noted columnist,
George Will, quotes the physicist, Steven Weinberg, as saying that our effort
to understand the universe is one of the very few things that lifts human life
a little above the level of farce, and gives it some of the grace of tragedy.
That is a darkly
pessimistic outlook, obviously, but is the logical conclusion of any consistent
evolutionary worldview.
Yet with all the
billions of dollars spent on such studies and all the brain-power of such large
numbers of brilliant scientists devoted to it and thus sidetracked from useful
research, they still don't know the answers to any of the key questions about
the universe.
As far as the origin
of the universe itself is concerned, the predominant belief has been the theory
of the Big Bang.
Actually, no one
knows.
The Big Bang concept
at least postulates a beginning, but that beginning consists of an
infinitesimal particle of space/time which explodes and evolves over billions
of years into our present cosmos.
One science writer, trying to help us understand it says:
Don't imagine outer space without matter in it. Imagine no space at all and
no matter at all. Good luck.
To the average person
it might seem obvious that nothing can happen in nothing. But to a quantum
physicist, nothing is, in fact, something.
The author of the above article calls this
notion a "Grand Guess." It is certainly not anything that
anyone knows!
The so-called
"Grand Guess" was put forth by M.I.T. astrophysicist Alan Guth.
According to this
concept the infinitesimal particle of space/time which exploded into the Big
Bang had to first go through a period of cosmic inflation, which presumably
would solve the various difficulties present in the unmodified Big Bang theory.
The latter is said to
be a "singularity," where the equations describing the phenomena of
the expansion cease to apply.
At such places,
physics dissolves into metaphysics. These mathematical points admit of no
explanation; they just are.
Scientists can't
explain singularities. That means they don't know how to explain the Big Bang,
although Guth's theory is said to handle most of the difficulties, and most
astronomers now accept inflation.
However, that doesn't
help much, so many modifications of inflation have been proposed.
Roughly 50 forms of
inflation have been proposed, named, and studied, including double, triple, and
hybrid inflation, tilted hybrid inflation, hyperextended inflation that is
"warm," "soft," "tepid," and "natural."
Even if astronomers
really understood all about inflation—that is the extremely rapid inflation of
the universe to about the size of a grapefruit in a tiny fraction of a second
prior to the explosive Bang—that would not answer the question of how the
universe began.
That
"singularity" is still there.
For instance, cosmic
inflation . . . does not eliminate the primeval singularity but simply isolates
it from today's universe.
They take refuge in
quantum physics, saying it somehow evolved from the primeval nothingness. And,
of course, they don't know that either.
Quantum theory also
holds that a vacuum, like atoms, is subject to quantum uncertainties.
This means that
things can materialize out of the vacuum, although they tend to vanish back
into it quickly. . . . this phenomenon has never been observed directly, . . .
In spite of not being
able to observe it, Guth and others hope that it happens. Of course, they don't
know.
Guth believes,
nevertheless, that all of this is consistent with the known laws of physics.
But that raises another question.
"Where do the laws of physics come from?' (Guth) pauses: "We are a long way from being able to answer that one."
Yes, that would be a
very big gap in scientific knowledge!
But maybe we should
bypass the question of the origin of the universe and study more tractable
problems such as the origin of stars and galaxies.
These would be
amenable to observation and ordinary physics, would they not?
Take galaxies, for
example. The most familiar, of course, is the Milky Way, the galaxy of which
our own sun is a member.
It is a spiral-disk
galaxy, a type very common in the cosmos.
It is supposed that
it began from vast quantities of gas from the Big Bang explosion collapsing
through gravitational attraction of the molecules in the gas.
Our galaxy is a
highly evolved entity.
. . . it is an
elegant structure that shows both order and complexity. . . . The end product
is especially remarkable in the light of what is believed to be the starting
point: nebulous blobs of gas.
How the universe made
the Milky Way from such simple beginnings is not altogether clear.
It's not clear at
all. They simply do not know how our galaxy began. Even less could be known
about other galaxies.
What about individual
stars? The standard guess is that the first stars, called Population III, were
formed only of hydrogen and helium.
Later stars with
heavier elements were supposedly generated when these first stars collapsed,
forming heavier elements in their heated interiors which then traversed space
to eventually coalesce enough to form new suns.
This remarkable
scenario is widely believed, but did it really happen?
Did later stars come
into being through variants on a common theme (such as the collapse of molecular
clouds) or in a seething mosh pit of disparate forces and mechanisms? No one
knows.
As far as those
hypothetical first simple stars are concerned—those stars whose collapse
eventually generated all the more complex stars—it is not even known that they
ever existed.
Astronomers have
never seen a pure Population III star, despite years of combing our Milky Way
galaxy.
Space does not allow
discussion here of the various speculations about other components of the
universe (planets, satellites, asteroids, dark matter, etc.). Ignorance about
these matters is also quite profound.
As another prominent astronomer, Alan Sandage, once
observed: The study of origins
is the art of drawing sufficient conclusions from insufficient evidence.
Their conclusions may
vary widely from one cosmologist to another, but they all try to keep them
compatible with their basic assumption of cosmic evolution over billions of
years.
It is well to
remember that they do not know how the cosmos evolved—or
stars, or galaxies, or anything else.
We who believe the
Bible to be the inspired word of the God/man, Jesus Christ, who is the one man
who has shown His power over His creation by defeating death itself—we know!
“By the word of the Lord were the heavens made;
and all the host of them by the breath of His mouth. . . . For He spake, and it
was done; He commanded, and it stood fast.” (Psalm 33:6,9).
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