On Sunday, August 24, 2025 at 4:42:26 AM UTC-6 John Clark wrote:

On Sun, Aug 24, 2025 at 1:16 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

*>>> **but I want what you're not interested in; to have model which 
explains the phenomenon.*


*>> What causes the cosmological redshift?*
*The expansion of space. *
*What causes the expansion of space? *
*Space expands because, according to Einstein's General Relativity, static 
equilibrium is unstable, the slightest perturbation will cause space to 
either expand or contract. *


*>Why did the universe expand, rather than contract?*


*That is unknown. However it could've been predicted that the universe had 
to be expanding rather than contracting for thermodynamic reasons and the 
arrow of time. The second law of thermodynamics can explain why tomorrow 
will have a higher entropy than today, there are simply more ways to be 
ordered than disordered *


*You have it reversed; should be more ways to be disordered than ordered. 
The entropy argument depends on the assumption that the universe is a 
closed system. AG*
 

*so if tomorrow is different from today then it's astronomically more 
likely to be less ordered not more ordered. But by using the exact same 
reasoning yesterday should also have had a higher entropy then today, which 
is clearly untrue.  *


*Even if the universe is expanding? I don't follow your claim. AG*

 

*However it would make sense if the universe started out in a small low 
entropy state. How the universe could've started out in such a state is 
perhaps the greatest mystery in physics, if not in all of science. *

 

*> Which equations of GR illustrate that static equilibrium is unstable? 
TY, AG *


*Einstein knew from the day he finished General Relativity in 1915 that his 
theory's equations predicted a universe that was either expanding or 
contracting, and he considered that a major flaw in his theory because all 
his astronomer friends told him (incorrectly) that the universe was 
static.  So in 1917 he added a "cosmological constant" that he thought 
would keep things static; Einstein later said that was the greatest 
scientific blunder of his life. In the 1930s Arthur Eddington proved 
mathematically that even with a cosmological constant any small 
perturbation  would cause the delicate balance to break down and the 
universe would either collapse or expand. About the same time Hubble 
discovered the universe was expanding and Einstein abandoned the 
cosmological constant idea. *

*  John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis 
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>* 

 

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