This is one of the areas where in my opinion the Big Bang model fails completely. Physics is about finding the underlying rules that govern our world, and not about inventing a world that fits our model. Coming up with a scenario where the entire Universe appears from nothing, then goes through an inflationary phase before suddenly materializing as a Universe, would literally have to be the biggest nonsense story ever told.New Scientist wrote:Space is big, wrote Douglas Adams in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. "Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mindbogglingly big it is." Too right: the edge of the observable universe is some 46 billion light years away. Within that volume there are anything between 100 and 200 billion galaxies, each containing hundreds of billions of stars.
If that weren't mind-blowing enough, according to the big bang theory – our best stab at explaining how it all came to be – everything exploded into being from nowhere, about 13.8 billion years ago. An infinitesimal pinprick of unimaginable heat and density has slowly stretched and cooled into the cosmos we know today.
GP theory explains the beginning of time in a very different way.
We believe an observers potential falls over time, and as the observers potential falls GP theory tells us that the potential of the electrons Increase, this is to be understood as all electrons in the Universe, not just those electons that form part of the observers body. This is because an observers potential is directly linked to its position on the time line.
The convergence of the electron potential and the observer potential ends when the electron potential matches the observer potential, at excactly 469 MV potential (half proton potential).
This critical point 469 MV is equivalent to the Schwartzchild radius, and I believe an observer at this point will have reached the end of time. Universal annihilation between every proton and electron will appear to take place, and obviously produce a nice Big Bang.
However, we must understand that this big bang is not a single event, but a continuous event, and as we sit here and enjoy our potential of some 930 MV, bodies elsewhere in our Universe are undergoing annihilation right now, they are simply further advanced in time than what we currently are.
I speculate that the complete annihilation of protons and an electrons, generate diametrically ejected photons of exactly 469 MV each, one travelling backwards in time and the other travelling forwards in time, each particle on it's own becoming a new 938 MV body at the beginning of time, i.e.. a brand new proton at the beginning of time in a brand new Universe.
When I calculate the kinetic energy of a proton, it becomes clear that there is no way this proton could have travelled very far, in fact the velocity of a proton as seen from current ground potential, gives it only enough energy to just escape our galaxy. For this reason I suspect that the matter in a galaxy is simply recycled, and that each galaxy is more or less a stand alone world. New protons continuously appearing at the edges of the galaxy, and old protons annihilating at the centre, thereby ensuring continuous creation and annihilation.
...where of course the electrons (the photons which dissapeared into the future) form an identical anti galaxy in the same way and in the same place.
Bang on!
Steven