Big Bang Not Fiery Chaotic Explosion, Orderly High-Velocity Relativistic Protons

Big Bang Was Not a Fiery Chaotic Explosion, But an Orderly High-Velocity Dispersion of Relativistic Protons That Became Dark Matter, New Scientific Paper Posits

LOS ALTOS HILLS, Calif., Feb. 19 (AScribe Newswire) – A new scientific paper published and available on the Internet, posits that the Big Bang was not a fiery, chaotic, disordered explosion but an orderly ultra-high velocity dispersion of relativistic protons and helium nuclei in a ratio of 12 to 1.

The paper explains that the dispersed relativistic protons and helium nuclei evolved into the mysterious dark matter that now represents about 83 percent of the mass of the universe. The discoveries were the result of over five years of analyzing research and interpreting available astronomical data by Jerome Drexler, the author of two recent astro-cosmology books.

The five-page paper, posted on the Cornell University Library arXiv.org physics website, is entitled, “A Relativistic-Proton Dark Matter Would Be Evidence The Big Bang Probably Satisfied The Second Law of Thermodynamics.” It is dated Feb.15 and is available to the public free of charge at: http://arxiv.org/abs/physics/0702132.

One of the various types of astronomical evidence supporting such a relativistic Big Bang is the ultra-high-energy cosmic ray (UHECR) protons that bombard the Earth every day. In Drexler’s relativistic-proton dark matter theory, these UHECR’s are considered to be stragglers from the galaxy-orbiting UHE relativistic protons that form the dark matter halos surrounding galaxies.

It is widely accepted that the dark matter of the universe was created by the Big Bang. Because of this strong linkage between the Big Bang and dark matter, the strong evidence of the existence of relativistic-proton dark matter provided in Drexler’s 2003 and 2006 books also provides strong evidence for the existence of a relativistic Big Bang.

Note that a relativistic Big Bang would be a very efficient way of creating a universe and conserving its energy because the fewest number of particles and the least amount of unusable energy would be created and dispersed. These characteristics may be desirable for the Cosmic Inflation theory and its associated Big Bang.

See Also:

Big Bang Enigma May be Solved by Relativistic Dark Matter

So-Called Anomalies in NASA-Hubble 3D Dark Matter Map Explained

Jerome Drexler, inventor of the LaserCard optical memory card, worked at Bell Labs, was a research professor in physics at NJIT, and chief scientist of LaserCard Corp. Drexler is the author of four books on his discovery of the nature of dark matter, dark energy and “dark matter cosmology” of the universe.