The link to the report about Houle includes:

n 1953 Hoyle's investigations of how stars generate heavy elements led him to 
predict the existence of a previously unknown state of the isotope carbon 12.

        I assume the writer and Houle meant an isomeric state os C-12.  Zny 
such states were known in 1954  Maybe Hoyle knew about the state he “discovered 
in the stars’ spectrums.

He might have been his way nonhigh lighting the quasi stable phases of most all 
nuclei.

Bob Cook

From: Jones Beene<mailto:jone...@pacbell.net>
Sent: Friday, August 28, 2020 6:23 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com<mailto:vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Subject: Re: [Vo]:The temperature of the CMB

Harry,

Are you familiar with the "big bounce" arguments?

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200117-what-if-the-universe-has-no-end

This emerging hypothesis seems to address some of the problems with Hoyle, Gold 
etc. which seem to falter due to CMB uniformity - and possibly represents the 
best new alternative to the standard cosmological model.

In the end, with new findings the uniformity of the CMB is in doubt and the 
current model is probably not as accurate as most would think.

Jones


H LV wrote:

The Riddle of the Redshift: The Universe We Don't Understand .
A talk given by Margaret Burbidge in 2001 ( She worked with Fred Hoyle)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3eYbpykJVD8
Harry


On Thu, Aug 27, 2020 at 4:32 PM H LV 
<hveeder...@gmail.com<mailto:hveeder...@gmail.com>> wrote:


https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/remembering-big-bang-basher-fred-hoyle/
quote
<<Hoyle also seemed obsessed with how close he had come to discovering the 
cosmic microwave background. It was 1963, and during an astronomy conference 
Hoyle fell into a conversation with Robert Dicke, a physicist who was planning 
to search for the cosmic microwaves predicted by the big bang model. Dicke told 
Hoyle that he expected the microwaves to be about 20 degrees above absolute 
zero, which is what most theorists were predicting. Hoyle then told Dicke that 
in 1941 the Canadian radio astronomer Andrew McCullough had found interstellar 
gas radiating microwaves at three degrees, not 20. >>

As we all know a CMB was found in 1965 but I was not aware that the early Big 
Bang theorists predicted a higher temperature for the CMB. I wonder how this 
discrepancy was explained by the BB theorists.

Harry

Reply via email to