Path: csiph.com!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!eternal-september.org!reader01.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: The Starmaker Newsgroups: sci.physics.relativity Subject: Re: FoR Date: Sat, 14 Jan 2023 16:23:17 -0800 Organization: The Starmaker Organization Lines: 38 Message-ID: <63C34775.7CD@ix.netcom.com> References: <653caf5a-9cbf-4b40-9421-bb486cb9043bn@googlegroups.com> <10d12096-db84-4411-bf78-ce89147527f5n@googlegroups.com> Reply-To: starmaker@ix.netcom.com MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Injection-Info: reader01.eternal-september.org; posting-host="c6d7451d7c843968e5804bde832612df"; logging-data="2256504"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX18ZcDO2q/Rwvh34ILleOr552Mk2ZLU/64M=" Cancel-Lock: sha1:7WO89LHPJwsmuqu0Nw8HwNfc+gI= X-Antivirus: Avast (VPS 230114-4, 01/14/2023), Outbound message X-Mailer: Mozilla 3.04Gold (WinNT; U) X-Antivirus-Status: Clean Xref: csiph.com sci.physics.relativity:599606 Peter Kinane wrote: > > On Saturday, 14 January 2023 at 10:10:13 UTC, Peter Kinane wrote: > > "Use E-PS to check if you have been swallowed." - > > https://www.amazon.com/dp/0995454876 > > I wrote this subsequent to seeing a post commenting on - ridiculing - some presumed premise that there was enough energy in the first atom to generate the Universe but have lost track of which thread it was so am pasting it here: The first atom was probably bigger than our Sun. Do the math, let's say the first atom was 50 times bigger than our Sun...then you will see it all adds up. > > The “Big Bang” produced Hydrogen and Helium atoms and tiny percentages of the immediate next ones in the periodic table. Let’s call these atoms 2nd level energy. > As apparently becomes apparent when production of the remaining atoms of the table is studied it only produced these rather simple atoms because the resource energy was not dense enough to sustain more complex ‘cooking’. > Let’s call that resource energy: 1st level energy. > Clouds of 2nd level energy, through the force of gravity, became denser and eventually this denser than 1st level energy collapsed and exploded producing atoms up to and including Iron on the periodic table. > Let’s call that resource 3rd level energy. > Some of that 3rd level energy is a massive body/star. When it collapses and explodes the remainder of the atoms in the periodic table are produced. > Let’s call it 4th level energy. > So as suggested above the Big Bang was very low density energy – 1st level cooking; it was not dense enough to sustain more complex ‘cooking’, though there probably was lots of it. -- The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable, to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable, and challenge the unchallengeable.