HUBBLE DISCOVERIES Recent discoveries by the Hubble Telescope - TopicsExpress



          

HUBBLE DISCOVERIES Recent discoveries by the Hubble Telescope have opened our eyes to a universe not only far more expansive than we ever imagined but far more intricate and ripe with implications than we can process. Trillions of stars equate to billions of possibilities for life, especially with another recent discovery that illustrates the majority of stars do indeed harbor their own solar systems and inhabitable planets. Even as recently as the 1920s, orthodox science believed in a static cosmos until Edwin Hubble demonstrated that it was actually expanding and, therefore, must have originated long ago in some titanic “Big Bang.” There are now challenges to this widely accepted theory, because with every expansion most logically there must be a contraction. Today, what all scientists would firmly agree on is that the universe is outwardly expanding and is of a finite age, born from a dramatic “phase transition” when the ether, or quantum vacuum, jumped from one energy state to another, sucking matter into physical existence within our universe. We are on the expansion side of the universe, which is what we see from our perspective, while the other side is shrinking. The universe extends far beyond what astronomers currently envision to be its outer limit. There are six additional belts in total which are void of any coarse material beyond the stars, planets and all matter. Matter itself is in constant transformation within the Material Belt and it is, therefore, subject to growth and disintegration processes. For this reason, matter can never be or become as old as the complete universe. At any given time, therefore, only young matter can be found in the Material Universe. As such, matter can only be, at best, a mere 40 or 45 billion years old, that is, matter in a solid and compact state. The age of the entire universe beyond the Material Belt, however, amounts to approximately 46 trillion years. Symmetry may be common in nature, but it usually indicates the presence of some kind of force field or organism. This notion is questioned when we consider the Red Square nebula. It is one of the most spectacular objects in the universe and reveals almost perfect symmetry. Photographed in infra-red, it looks more like a gemstone than a star, albeit on a cosmic scale. The Red Square is described as resulting from the death agonies of a star called MWC 922 which is spewing gas and dust and plasma all over the region. Explosions, though, are not likely to be symmetrical—certainly not the small ones we create on Earth, much less when nebula-sized. Researchers acknowledge the Red Square’s amazing regularity, and realize that some of what we are seeing could be from bands or concentric ripples representing periodic releases of energy from the central node. The Red Square is now being labeled the most symmetrical object of comparable complexity ever photographed. Given the fact that our solar system is on the far fringes of the Milky Way galaxy, our sun is relatively very small in linear time. Evolution at the center of the galaxy has had at least a billion years head start, a very long time for a race of extraterrestrial beings to ponder the nature of energy and light. To consider ourselves as the only “intelligent” life in the universe would be naïve and egotistical, and to consider our Earth history free from extraterrestrial influence is globally ethnocentric. Beings from far away, or perhaps right here in another dimension, have had a vested interest in Earth for eons. Our planet is a genetic storehouse of information, which may also be resourceful to another race’s own survival, especially those of a synthetic nature. But this treasure-trove of DNA is currently being squeezed out by a single reckless parasite called the human race.
Posted on: Tue, 04 Mar 2014 04:17:26 +0000

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