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New Theories / Re: What is the CMBR?
« Last post by McQueen on Today at 07:24:27 »Those CMBR emissions are currently proposed to represent the photons emitted when protons and electrons combined to create the first hydrogen atoms in the universe. Those photons were then stretched by the metric expansion of the universe to a much longer wavelength than they started off as. For that reason, photons emitted by any nearby hydrogen recombination would have much shorter wavelengths and thus would not match those produced by the CMBR.
This would be a wonderful explanation IF it is taken for granted that the present day Universe is absolutely quiescent and emits no signal at all that can be traced and put into a graphical representation. This is especially a stretch of the imagination when one remembers the sheer, unimaginable size of these clouds of hydrogen and the violent interactions they are witness, to, the birth of galaxies and stars, the violent merger of Galaxies, the explosion supernovae and so on. Surely anyone with even a bit of imagination would be able to picture the birth of currents as the result of such interactions and the resultant micro-wave radiation.
The theory that I propose also uses an exactly similar theory, namely that Dark Matter represents photons born at the time of Big Bang, and undergo a loss of energy due to the metric expansion of the Universe. But in this case the loss of energy is so great that these photons (10^-40 J) born at the time of the Big Bang do not for all purposes exist at the macro level at all. They are all but undetectable according to the provisions of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.