Getting Rid of Big Bang and Dark Cosmology

Alexandre Kassiantchouk Ph.D.
Time Matters
Published in
2 min readSep 1, 2021

--

“We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.”
Albert Einstein

1920s explanation of redshift by the Doppler effect led to Accelerating Universe Expansion, Big Bang, and Dark Energy.
In 2019, mainstream scientists had to acknowledge the cosmology crisis because observations did not match the theory.
In “Time Matters” published by Amazon in August 2021, I suggested using time dilation to explain redshift:

Light that is sent from an area with slower time is redshifted when received in an area with faster time, and here is why. For example, if it takes 10 seconds to send a 100-wave signal, then it will take 20 seconds to receive it in an area where clock ticks twice faster. The original signal has 100 / 10 = 10 Hz frequency, but when received its frequency is 100 / 20 = 5 Hz. Drop in frequency means increase in wavelength, because frequency multiplied by wavelength is constant — the speed of light. That is how time dilation in the past becomes redshift now. For the most distant galaxy GN-z11, from which light travels 32 billion years to Earth, redshift Z=11.09 is observed, that means: 32 billion years ago time was 12 times slower. The wavelength of the light has increased 12 times not because the light was stretched 12 times out, but because wavelength always (and in an eye) depends on the unit of time it is in. Interesting where from 14B years of the Universe age came from: 14B years ago time was twice slower than today (redshift Z=1).

I proposed an in-lab experiment, and if it shows that time speeds up by a factor of 1.00000000007 a year (or 1.0000000000002 a day), then Hubble’s constant gets a new meaning instead of the expansion rate. Modern Caesium-133 clocks have a precision million times better than needed for such an experiment, so it is verifiable.

Read free eBook “Time Matters” in PDF, Amazon, Google.

--

--