Thursday, August 28, 2008

The Big Bang And The Start Of The Universe

The Big Bang And The Start Of The Universe by Patrick Omari

"In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth." This is how the Bible kicks off, and for almost two millennia was the accepted theory for how the Universe and the Earth came into being. A tricky subject and something that takes a great deal of thought to even contemplate, the origin of time is not an easy thing to study. Up until modern technological advances and the advent of space telescopes it would in fact seem logical to credit a divine being with the creation of the Universe, simply for lack of a better explanation. However what this simple sentence does not explain is how the Universe was created, it merely says that it was done.

In the late 19th century and early 20th century scientific thinking began to overtake religious ideas as men such as Darwin and Einstein began to publish their theories. Many of the new scientific ideas would look to explain the laws that govern the way things are and the way that they came to be. While Darwin would upset a great number of religious people with his ideas on the origin of life on Earth, Einstein and his contemporaries' ideas would cause relatively less stir in those circles due to the vagueness in the description of the start of time in the Bible.

While Einstein would lay the foundations for modern scientific thinking with his theories of special and general relativity his work would be expanded on later by numerous scientists, physicists and astronomers. Through the 1910s and 1920s it was discovered that the Universe was expanding, the term 'big bang' was actually coined as a derogatory term for the theory by Fred Hoyle while speaking on BBC radio. The genesis of the modern big bang theory started in the 1960s and has come on massively in the last ten years with additional data from the Hubble Space Telescope and NASA's Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP).

Big Bang theory states that the Universe was created in a single event 13.7 billion years ago. The initial condition of the Universe is still not fully known, but it is widely thought that it began as a singularity of infinite density and temperature. The first stage of the Big Bang is known as the Planck Epoch, lasting just a couple of trillionths of a second. At this tiny interval in time gravity was thought to have been as strong as the other fundamental forces, suggesting that everything was united as one single force. Understanding of this phase of the Big Bang is still limited, but experiments are planned in the future to gain a better knowledge of what happened. The Large Hadron Collider at CERN will enable further research to be done into the earliest phases of matter but will not allow research to be done directly into the Planck Epoch.

Still during the initial fractions of a second the Universe would undergo several major changes in its infant state. The main things being a cooling and then exponential growth through cosmic expansion. At this stage the Universe consisted of a quark-gluon plasma, which is essentially the building blocks of matter as we know it. As particles such as photons continued to form over the crucial first few seconds of the Universe the matter that was coming into being started to become more recognisable. After three minutes the temperature had dropped to the level where protons and neutrons can begin to combine into atomic nuclei. After 17 more minutes the temperature and density fell to a point where nuclear fusion was no longer possible.

For the next 70,000 years matter continues to form. Following this hydrogen and helium atoms start forming as the density of the fledgling Universe starts to fall and photons are free to travel, resulting in the cosmic microwave background that we can see present. This radiation gives us a picture of what the Universe was like at this point in time.

Over time the Universe starts to become transparent and structures begin to form due to gravitational forces. The Universe loses its homogenous nature as matter starts to clump together. After approximately 100 million years the first stars begin to form, eventually generating the heavy elements that will start to give life to planets. Even larger groups of matter will collapse and form galaxies. After billions of years the Universe begins to resemble that which we see today. Around 8 to 9 billion years after the Big Bang our own solar system is formed, with life evolving just one billion years after the formation of the Earth.

So while we have a fairly decent idea of how the Universe came to be it is quite apparent that there are a large amount of unanswered questions. Undoubtedly these will be solved in time. The Universe does however give us a lot more to work with in regards to how our solar system was made, and what the Universe was like to begin with than you might think. If you take into account the speed of light when we look out at the systems outside the Milky Way it is effectively like looking back in time as it has taken light millions, if not billions of years to reach Earth. The further out we look, the further back in time we're looking.

As scientific theory advances and experiments are more detailed it'll be interesting to see if there are any significant advances in the Big Bang theory and if any questions on the origin of our Universe are answered. When the Large Hadron Collider is switched on at CERN we may have some of these answers, and it'll be interesting to see what conclusions are drawn.



Patrick is an expert Research and Travel consultant. His current interest is in Birmingham Airport Hotels, Stansted Parking and Pink Elephant Stansted.

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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

What Do Solar Winds Have To Do With Life On Mars?

What Do Solar Winds Have To Do With Life On Mars? by Russ Miller

The concept that there is life on other planets and in other galaxies is widely popular. It is the core idea of countless science fiction novels. Many television shows, including the classic Star Trek series, and major movies have been spawned by this concept.

Some blockbuster movies that come to mind include Close Encounters of the Third Kind, 1977; Star Wars, 1977; E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial, 1982; Independence Day, 1996; and Signs, 2002.

Moviegoers find such film-fare fascinating. They want to believe that life on other planets and in other galaxies is possible.

Secular Humanists are major proponents of Darwinian-style evolution. They claim that life will be found on other planets and the United States government is spending billions of taxpayer dollars searching for life from outer space.

However, having discovered the complete impossibility of life having begun spontaneously from non-living matter here on earth, and completely closed to the fact that life might have been created by God just as the Holy Bible claims it was, they are simply sending their problem to where no one other than their own institutions can conduct the observations.

Thus the world will be subject to their interpretations of whatever they find. This is not how real science functions.

Consider the current, aggressive search for life on Mars, for example.

Here is where those solar winds come into play.

It is an observed scientific fact that micro-organisms from earth waft up on wind currents. These have been found in the earth's upper atmosphere and are assumed to get pushed out into space by the solar winds emanating from the sun.

These solar winds push things away from the sun and since Mars is further out than the earth the theory is that whenever the microbes get within range of Mars' gravitational pull, they will be brought down onto the surface of the planet.

This is what NASA's search for life on Mars is truly all about. The Secular Humanist crowd, devoid of any real scientific evidence in support of "from-goo-to-you" Darwinian-style evolution on our planet, hope to recover some of these earth-born microbes from the surface of the Red Planet.

Then headlines around the world will scream, LIFE EVOLVED ON MARS!!!

Keep this in mind, because if it happens as I suspect that it one day will, the discovery will be used to mislead billions of people.

Should this event occur, the proof that the microbes came from earth will be that they will be just like the microbes we find here today. Should this deceptive event take place it may turn out to be one of the greatest frauds perpetrated against mankind in the history of the world.



Russ Miller is author of The GENESIS Report Series. Register at http://www.new-earth-thought.com to receive FREE his 50 Facts vs. Darwinism e-mail series.

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Wednesday, June 18, 2008

Biology Is Crucial Part Of Science

Biology Is Crucial Part Of Science by Alisha Dhamani

Biology is an intensely practical subject and both individual and group investigations are carried out, some being assessed for public examinations. The National Curriculum is broadly followed but with a pattern of progress which the department believes to be more logical, interesting and demanding. Biology is the fascinating study of life on Earth.

Come along with us, as we become microscopic and journey inside a cell, discover new types of life forms, and play biology games. Biology is rich in examples of science as a human endeavor, its historical perspectives, and the development of scientific understanding. As concepts are developed this strand can be interwoven to create an in-depth understanding.

Biology is the broadly based study of living organisms and has become an increasingly dynamic and wide-ranging discipline. It may be approached by focus on cell and molecular processes, development, organismal physiology and morphology, natural history, evolution, conservation, or ecology. Biology is essential and chemistry, physics or maths are most useful. Admissions officers may look sympathetically at other combinations if the grades are good.

Biochemical and microscopic testing is conducted to determine the type and possible origin of biological materials prior to DNA analysis. In addition, trace evidence is removed from the submitted items and can be forwarded to the Trace Section for further analysis. Biological systems also operate at many different spatial and temporal scales.

These range from the very small scales of biochemistry to the very large scales of ecology. Biology is the study of life and comprises all levels from the molecular to the global. In biology we study living organisms, their organisation and their functions.

Biochemistry is influenced by the external environment, by interaction with pathogens, and by other stimuli. Putting genomic and biochemical data together into quantitative and predictive models of biochemistry and physiology will be the work of a generation of computational biologists.

Biologists consider the existence of biological evolution to be a fact . It can be demonstrated today and the historical evidence for its occurrence in the past is overwhelming. Bioterrorism is therefore a real issue in synthetic biology, and perhaps the most important other than pure research to identify the elements of driving living systems.

Viruses cannot reproduce or express their genes without the help of a host. Viruses that kill their infected host cell are called virulent.

The DNA in these type of viruses is reproduced through the lytic cycle.

In the lytic cycle, the virus breaks open, or lyses, their host cell, resulting in the destruction of the host.

Human biology is an interdisciplinary academic field of biology, biological anthropology, and medicine which focuses on humans; it is closely related to primate biology, and a number of other fields. The human biology major was founded in 1970 at Stanford University.

Biodemography is a new branch of human (classical) demography concerned with understanding the complementary biological and demographic determinants of and interactions between the birth and death processes that shape individuals, cohorts and populations. The biological component brings human demography under the unifying theoretical umbrella of evolution, and the demographic component provides an analytical foundation for many of the principles upon which evolutionary theory rests including fitness, selection, structure, and change.

Whereas biodemographers are concerned with birth and death processes as they relate to populations in general and to humans in particular, population biologists specializing in life history theory are interested in these processes only insofar as they relate to fitness and evolution.



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Thursday, June 12, 2008

What Is Astronomy? - Astronomy 101

What Is Astronomy? - Astronomy 101 by Koz Huseyin

Since the dawn of time, men and women have looked up into the sky, looking for answers. Why are we here? Where are we? And what are those shinning lights in the night sky? Astronomy thus began, and it is the study of that beauty that we call the heavens.

Astronomy today is simply not looking up at the stars, finding new stars, and analyzing catalogued stars, it encompasses many different areas. For example some define astronomy as the study of the motions and natures of celestial bodies, while others will say that it is about studying the objects and the matter in space, while yet others define astronomy as the study of the Universe, which includes everything.

The study of astronomy has gone on since the dawn of time. Men and women wanted to know more and looking up with thought and wonder amazed people thousands of people as it does with us. The study of astronomy is science. And men and woman started spending more time studying what lay outside of the sphere of our Earth.

This study of astronomy has advanced over the years, whereas a thousand years ago there were no instruments that could give us a peak of what lay outside the Earth, like our planets. In fact for so much time men and woman believed that we were the centre of the Universe. However, as we have progressed we have found the Earth is round, and we are not the centre of the Universe, but on an arm in the Milky Way galaxy; one of many hundreds of billions of other galaxies.

Telescopes are used for actually viewing the heavens and celestial bodies. The term celestial bodies, means the stars, the galaxies, the planets and all objects in space. Optical telescopes however is a recent invention compared to how long man has looked up at the stars in wonder.

It was Galileo Galilee who made his own kind of telescope, and viewed Saturn, and said that Saturn looked like it had ears! And this happened only a few hundred years ago! Another major contributor to the telescope was Isaac Newton, who also was the first one to find gravity exists when an apple fell on his head!

Both Galileo and Newton made such an impact in the field of astronomy that both there original designs of the telescope are in use today! You can find these telescopes at many stores, though toy store telescopes will often have Galileo's version of the telescope. Albeit that the telescopes available today are much more sophisticated and advanced than Galileo's or Newton's.

The field of astronomy is simple amazing. It has transformed our view of our Universe. The study of astronomy did not come with ease. For a long time the repression of the facts about our place in the Universe was hidden. Many were even put to death because of there views in astronomy. These pioneers paved the way for us, and today we can look billions upon billions of light years away and see objects which would not be possible to physically visit in a lifetime.



Learn more about what is astronomy, and discover the power of owning your own meade telescope.

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