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==Recent non-standard cosmology theories?==
Added more information about Arp's theory. Also removed links that were in the main text. Also don't see the connection between non-standard cosmology and the solar neutrino problem.


This article explains that non-standard cosmologies (arguments against the Big Bang) are much less and less published in mainstream science journals as time goes on. I believe this is true. In the last ten years if you look for non-standard cosmologies hardly any appear in established peer-reviewed science journals. They always appear in fringe journals. The Misplaced Pages article on Non-standard cosmology doesn't mention any new theories. Nothing in the last 30 years etc.
: I readded the links ... and the solar neutrino problem is related to the general "problems" of the "standard"....


There is a long list of non-standard cosmologies . These are extreme fringe ideas published by mostly non-scientists in fringe journals or self-published. ] (]) 11:53, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
The other thing that I removed is that Arp's observations that correlate quasars and normal galaxies would invalidate big bang. Suppose Arp's observations were correct. So quasars and normal galaxies are connected. So what? Quasar redshifts are due to the Flubberizoch effect, and don't invalidate Hubble flow of normal galaxies.
:Remember, the article lists ], ], and ]. These are genuine theories. They are fringe compared to Lambda-CDM, but they are still genuine theories. You claim they are not published in established peer-review science journals, are you claiming the ] is not an established peer-reviewed science journal? It published this paper just a few months ago. What about this, published in ]? If they are published less it's because fewer cosmologists work on them, ''not'' because they are bad science. You could make the argument that the article should not list these theories, but if you claim that they are "extreme fringe ideas published by mostly non-scientists in fringe journals or self-published", you are incorrect. ] (]) 12:05, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
::There is a distinction to be made between alternative theories for parts of Lambda-CDM and completely new cosmologies. Historically, there were a variety of cosmologies which denied the FLRW metric which neither MOND/TeVeS nor f(R) do. Also, it's important to acknowledge that the alternatives do not get the same level of exposure as the standard CDM explanations. ] (]) 12:13, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
:::I still cannot accept the paragraph - it says "Big Bang opponents often ignore well-established evidence from newer research ..." but how many of the theories listed on the page are ''actually'' denying the Big Bang? It's extremely unfair to associate people working on many of the theories on the page with denying the Big Bang, some of them might even treat that association as an insult. Tying things to "denying the FLRW metric" does not work either, because you can still have the Big Bang without FLRW, e.g. this paper which challenges one of the core assumptions of FLRW is absolutely respectable science and was published in a respectable journal . Again as long as the article lists respectable non-standard cosmologies, it should not have that paragraph. ] (]) 12:28, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
::::No, I did not say they are never published in established peer-review science journals. The source I cited said that alternatives to the Big Bang are ''less and less frequently'' published in peer-reviewed journals. This is exactly the case. The papers you have listed are not what I would have in mind as a non-standard cosmology, they are just modified gravity theories. I don't think we should confuse non-standard cosmological models which challenge the Big Bang with modified gravity theories which are alternatives to just the cold dark matter model. I believe the "alternative gravity" section should edited to reflect this. The ] is not an alternative to the ]. It's originator Jacob Bekenstein is a supporter of the Big Bang. Nor is ] an alternative to the Big Bang etc. These are modified gravity theories, they are not alternative cosmologies to the Big Bang they are compatible with it. Of course, non-standard cosmologies sometimes make use of alternative or modified gravity theories but it is incorrect to this cite these as non-standard cosmologies. None of the authors you cited dispute the Big Bang and are proposing an entirely new cosmological model. Can you actually show a paper in a well respected peer reviewed journal that disputes the Big Bang specifically and proposes an alternative in the last 5 years? Very few papers of this kind have been published in the last 10 years. I see a lot of electric universe stuff but none of it makes it to peer review. ] (]) 12:30, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
:::::Are you arguing that modified gravity theories are not non-standard cosmologies? If so, are you also arguing that they don't belong on this page and therefore should be deleted? ] (]) 12:33, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
{{od}}It's hard to say. There are extravagant extensions to MOND which are absolutely non-standard cosmologies and, to be sure, many MOND papers and talks start out with a reference to cosmology rather than dark matter (which I've always found weird, but anyway). I think MOND, f(R), and TeVeS deserve inclusion here, but they are more successful at straddling the mainstream/fringe divide than essentially all the other topics on the page. This is the problem with a page where the inclusion criteria is just "not standard". ] (]) 13:28, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
:Also, challenging late-time isotropy does not, in itself, challenge the FLRW metric. Indeed, the paper authors you cite assume FLRW background because, I suppose, they have nothing else to replace it with. This is hardly "Big Bang denial" of the same sort then. ] (]) 13:38, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
:::Banedon I think it depends on how we define non-standard cosmology, I am defining it like the author of the article I linked to, basically an alternative to the Big Bang model. Technically you are right because any model that challenges the ΛCDM model might be termed a "non-standard cosmology" by default, such as modified Newtonian dynamics, entropic gravity or any theory of modified gravity but I don't think that is what is in mind when readers check out our article on non-standard cosmology which talks about alternatives to the Big Bang such as the steady state theory. I also checked a bunch of textbooks that mention "non-standard cosmology", that term is not always used but when it is, it refers to cosmological models that challenge the Big Bang not just one aspect of it. We have an article ]. Maybe we need to create an article "Alternative to the Big Bang" where we list the Steady-state model, plasma cosmology and others. However, is there really any point because it would be a historical article. There doesn't appear to be any recent scientific alternatives that we can add references for.
:::I think it is confusing to list MOND, f(R) gravity, and TeVeS with the steady state and plasma cosmology etc because those researchers are not denying the Big Bang like plasma cosmology theorists. Even if you disagree, one observation of mine that I don't think you will deny is that this article is grossly out of date. Are there any modern alternative cosmology models that challenge the Big Bang? Our article mentions Fred Hoyle and Jayant V. Narlikar on a revised steady state model but that was 25 or 30 years ago and Eric Lerner's plasma cosmology was 20 odd years ago. What new information could be added to the article to improve it? ] talks here about how there are no recent alternatives to the Big Bang "''The last adherents to the ancient, discredited alternatives are at last dying away. The Big Bang is no longer a revolutionary endpoint of the scientific enterprise; it's the solid foundation we build upon. Its predictive successes have been overwhelming, and no alternative has yet stepped up to the challenge of matching its scientific accuracy in describing the Universe''". The non-standard cosmology I am talking about appears to be a dead field. The source I originally added to the article notes that it rarely is published in peer review. Hopefully you agree on that. ] (]) 15:35, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
{{od}}Arguably ]-like theories are anti-Big Bang as would any theory that avoided a Big Bang singularity, but these are technical differences which probably do not deserve lumping. To be honest, I've always been a little uncomfortable with this article. It started out as a holding place for people who wanted their "alternatives to the Big Bang" ideas expounded upon (and you can see them scattered throughout the archives). There is a place for this kind of contextual information, but most of the article's topics were firmly fringe 15 years ago and today it's such a backwater as to be almost quaint. To the extent that anything is relevant to modern scholarship, it is those ideas that focus on niggling doubts regarding small parts of the theory... quantum gravity considerations, problems with the dark sector, inflation, etc. We may very well be looking at two different subjects here and spinning out might not be terrible. An article on ] might accommodate the F(r), TeVeS, and MOND ideas more naturally than "nonstandard cosmology". We can include a very brief mention of them and link over there. ] (]) 16:02, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
:I agree, for me the article is confusing certain topics together as one. I think someone needs to sort this mess out. I would support the creation of a new article or merging certain content into another. It seems this article was quite controversial 10 years ago but now has low-traffic, so I don't think it would be controversial to move content into another article. Interestingly I looked at the creation of this article, its been around since 2003 and the first editor defined non-standard cosmology as "any cosmological theory which argues that the big bang theory is incorrect" , over the years many different editors have lumped together many different theories. The outcome is a confusing article. Most users probably don't have time to fix this issue but I believe it should be sorted. ] (]) 16:20, 3 February 2021 (UTC)


:Just to chime in, I think splitting this into "old, totally fringe, and/or nonsense ideas" and "modern legitimate alternatives" is a good idea. What exactly to call those articles I'm less certain. I've been a Misplaced Pages astronomy/cosmology page watcher since the mid-2000s and the last few years have had a marked reduction in fringe peddlers. It's been rather pleasantly boring, and means that cleaning these up should be easier. I think such a separation would be worthwhile from an encyclopedic standpoint: Arp, Tired Light, and Plasma Cosmology really don't belong on the same page as MOND and the original steady state, for example. - ] (]) 20:03, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
]
::<small>I have a soft-spot for Zwicky's original flavor tired light, but that story is less well-known than original flavor steady state, for sure. ] (]) 20:39, 3 February 2021 (UTC)</small>
:::It will be hard to draw a clear line between the two, because as jps mentioned, eternal inflation is also currently a legitimate theory without a "Big Bang" (in the traditional sense of the word). How about doing this: focus on the reputable alternative theories on this page, and have a small section with "old/debunked theories" with links to the main articles? ] (]) 11:58, 4 February 2021 (UTC)
::::This has normally been the "fringe" article and I think its name indicates as much. While I am all in favor of ]ing the saner proposals in Misplaced Pages generally, I'm not sure ''this'' is the article to do that. Unless there has been movement in the literature towards using the term "non-standard cosmology" to mean anything vaguely at odds with vanilla Lambda-CDM. ] (]) 12:19, 4 February 2021 (UTC)
:::::I gotta say, although I still believe the sentence should not be included (and I think associating MOND, TeVeS etc with "non-standard cosmology" is defensible), I also think there are bigger priorities than fixing this article, e.g. a standalone article on ]. It doesn't look like any of us can actually spare the time to rewrite this article, either. ] (]) 01:16, 9 February 2021 (UTC)
{{od}}I have been digging a bit more into MOND to see how to distinguish it from other cosmological approaches. Right now, I'm not convinced it is so easily demarcated from other fringe proposals. Sure, it has far more "mainstream" champions than, say, plasma cosmology, but on the other hand its successes are constrained almost entirely to galactic dynamics and it is entirely unclear how it would be incorporated into a cosmological theory that excised CDM, for example. I just went down a little bit of a rabbit hole in Stacey McGaugh and David Merritt's work and see this as a glaring issue that both of them more-or-less tacitly acknowledge (Pawel Kroupa less so). Interestingly, then, the framing for novel cosmological approaches in terms of MOND really is not being done in the academic journals yet. The sentence, interestingly, still is rather accurate for it. f(R) theories, on the other hand, basically are only bandied about in PRL-type papers so in the context of those ideas there is less of an argument. Interestingly, a lot of f(R) theories ignore MOND entirely since they start from the action on the relativity side which is one of the "aesthetic" arguments against TeVeS. ] (]) 13:19, 10 February 2021 (UTC)
:Yeah, MOND has the glaring problem of "how do you explain the CMB?" with no good answer that I'm aware of. It is possible to come up with theories that reduce to MOND in some limit, though. . I would certainly call any cosmology based on this relativistic MOND theory a non-standard cosmology. ] (]) 00:44, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
::Wow, what a mess! It would be basically impossible to write a coherent "intermediate level" explanation for structure formation or the CMB on the basis of that. We could, perhaps, reframe this article to make that point explicit: it's the ''cosmologies'' that are based on MOND that are non-standard. And, additionally, they are not in the journals. Also, I found to be as close as possible to a bird's eye view of the situation. ] (]) 13:35, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
::I reorganized the lede to try to relegate Big Bang denial to an era that precedes Lambda-CDM. This may help matters a bit? ] (]) 13:46, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
::Aaand... now I reorganized the entire article. The Big Bang-denying versus Big Bang-accepting cosmologies are now disambiguated for the most part. (Not sure about Dirac Large Number Hypothesis, actually... don't think anyone is taking that idea seriously). ] (]) 14:21, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
:::I wrote a fair amount of new text and deleted some others (as jps mentioned I don't think anyone is taking Dirac Large Number Hypothesis seriously). I still think we should not highlight theories that deny the Big Bang in the lede - at this point it is a historical artefact, and the article as it is places (in my opinion fully justified) much more emphasis on modifications to Lambda-CDM and to GR. ] (]) 06:35, 25 February 2021 (UTC)
{{od}}I think this is fair. To decide whether to excise Big Bang denial ''completely'' is an interesting question. We could create a new article such as ] where it might be more clearly couched and then we might avoid thornier issues. If/when we spin-out that first section into an article like that, we could reinvigorate an article like ] which could include the ones in the second and third sections. That might be a better way forward? ] (]) 16:23, 28 March 2021 (UTC)


== Alternative organizations ==
: That's not what, I think, Arp argues ... he argues that Hubble's law would be incorrect (from the material I've seen ... though I could be wrong).
: Sincerely, ]


I wonder if there could be a better way to present this material. @]
::Reddi, you are not incorrect. Arp's observations are almost always taken to invalidate the Hubble expression. -Ionized


"Non-standard" is literally negative ("not-standard"), and I think most non-scientist readers will assume that this label is equal to fringe. However we have no theory that explains the finding which lead to the hypothesis of dark matter, including ΛCDM. The 'standard' is just the most conservative one; the alternatives are not necessarily fringe. The article ] is a hodge-podge of things which necessarily will be incoherent (to be sure it is less incoherent than many articles!).
::: Taken by whom? One reason most astrophysicists I know don't take Arp seriously is that no one can figure out why his observations invalidates Hubble flow or the Big Bang. He claims that it invalidates the Big Bang, but if you can find a place where he spells out that logic, I'd be appreciative (I'm not being sarcastic. I really would be interested if you could point me to something where Arp explains why his results invalidate the big bang. I've never been able to understand this and neither has anyone else I've talked to.) -RR


But what would be better? I think the "Alternatives to XX" approach is more neutral and already in use for ] and it is used in the section names here. This immediate points to an issue with this article: one of the sections is "Alternatives and extensions to Lambda-CDM" but Lambda-CDM is supposed to the Standard Cosmology, so that non-standard cosmology would be "Alternatives and extensions to Lambda-CDM" right? Furthermore, Lambda-CDM is described as the mathematical model for the Big Bang theory so are these two things or one thing? Are the alternatives two things or not?
:::: It has been a while since I read his books and I do not recall if he actually gives a <i>detailed</i> account as to why the Hubble expression is invalid, or if he just states his observations and implicitly hints and assumes that the Hubble expression is invalidly used. As I do not have time to go through and re-read his books right now, I urge that you do so. If he gives a detailed account anywhere, it would be in his two books: "Quasars, Redshifts, and Controversy" and "Seeing Red". If you have <i>not</i> read those books (at least the sections on the redshift and other observations, not including variable mass as that is a different issue) that is most definitely the first place to begin. I can not make any accurate assumptions about how you view the redshift, so I will not attempt to vividly explain his ideas to you. But it seems that for some reason the idea that a high-redshift object physically connected to a low-redshift object, does not in your mind invalidate the idea that redshift is a measure of recession velocity (the standard Hubble interpretation.) But if two connected objects should be moving at drastically different velocities, why do we not see a major change in their relative orientation or size when looked at, say over a 40 year interval? Most likely, anything I say here is far from a complete description, and will probably be viewed as wrong or misleading anyhow, so I will go no further. Like I said I havent read Arp's books recently so I do not recall his detailed rebuttal, or if he even gave one (although I can't imagine why he would go on such a crusade without ever explaining himself.) Please read his books. -] 19:53, 2 Feb 2004 (UTC) (As a side note, any chance you would consider posting your replies <i>after</i> my posts, rather then directly in the middle of them? By the time you are done posting in the middle of mine, they end up almost completely incoherent, and I have to go through and add initials to all of my newly fragmented paragraphs. I just want to be civil with you from now on. Thank you.)-ionized


So perhaps breaking out "Alternatives to Big Bang theory" and "Alternatives to Lambda-CDM" and summarizing them here would allow this article to better explain the interconnections between these subjects. Then this article would be "Alternative cosmologies" ] (]) 01:25, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
:::: As a follow up... I am home from work and am now able to peruse Arps books I mentioned above. Indeed, Arp does not go straight into how the Big Bang is "invalidated", but rather spreads his arguments out throughout each book. This is most likely so that the reader maintains interest, and is forced to peruse all of his arguments before jumping to any one conclusion. However, it still stands that if you want to know what Arp is thinking, reading his books, starting with "Quasars, Redshifts, and Controversies", is most highly recommended. I purchased my copies through amazon.com, where you can also find used copies, for around $20 each. Also available at: http://redshift.vif.com/Apeiron%20Home.htm
::::One more note: it was Arp who in 1966 gave to the astronomical community the "Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies". His latest addition is the "Catalogue of Discordant Redshift Associations" published in 2003. -] 02:30, Feb 3, 2004 (UTC)


:I'm fine with renaming this page to "Alternatives to Lambda-CDM" or "Alternatives to standard cosmology". ] also has some relevant content which may benefit from a "See also" to here. Of course, we'll have to do this all over again once astrophysicists come up with a better model that doesn't require as many fudge factors and ], or in our case, cheat 10<sup>−32</sup> seconds... ] ] 12:48, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
::: One other thing. Arp seems to think that it is a big deal that quasars seem to cluster around z=1.93. No one else does. One fun calculation is to calculate the redshift at which the Lyman alpha line first starts to be visible. One would expect that the point where a major UV line appears in visible, one should see a huge number of quasars. -RR
:I don't really see the problem with "non-standard". It's about ideas that, well, aren't standard. If anything, "Alternatives to..." sounds a bit too positive; it carries the suggestion that the "alternatives" are all ''viable,'' which not all of them are. ] (]) 17:40, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
::Echoing this: Non-standard cosmologies are mostly not viable, that's why they're not the standard model. This has been a dumping-ground for a bunch of fringe stuff (I forgot that the sections on redshift periodicity and plasma cosmology was so long: that should be drastically trimmed), which is unfortunate, and probably wouldn't be fixed by renaming it to "Alternatives", unless you plan to just remove all the fringe stuff with that rename? - ] (]) 18:46, 26 December 2023 (UTC)
::Not all non-viable alternatives are notable, but some are, for historical, approximate, or pedological reasons, eg ] ;-) Plus (briefly) discussing the reasons for non-viable theories is itself helpful in clarifying what makes a successful theory. So I think the viability issue can be dealt with. ] (]) 19:47, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
:::I don't object to covering the empirically disfavored theories; as you say, they can be of historical interest or have other aspects that make them noteworthy. But if we're going to have both the disproved and the respectable-but-niche ideas all in the same page, I'm inclined to "non-standard" more than I am to "alternative". Of course, that's just my sense of the connotations. ] (]) 20:34, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
:That wording just hides the negation. Logically, it is still there because "alternative to X" implies "is not X". --] (]) 07:37, 24 December 2023 (UTC)


== GRSI merge ==
::: Please see note about redshift periodicities posted below -] 16:25, Feb 3, 2004 (UTC)


@] In my opinion the ] was merge into ] not this page. ] (]) 02:46, 7 January 2024 (UTC)
:: In fact, if one takes the time to read Hubble's original works, he is very skeptical of the expansion interpretation and only proposed some of his ideas because (at the time,) no other interpretation of redshift was available, other than Doppler. Nowadays there are other redshift mechanisms, whether or not they can be applied to astrophysical process is another story. -Ionized


:There were two proposals: "Alternatives to general relativity" and "Non-standard cosmology." Merging into "Alternatives to general relativity" would be patently wrong, as GR-SI claims it is within General Relativity. For example, one of its papers has the title "An explanation for dark matter and dark energy consistent with the Standard Model of particle physics and General Relativity." Therefore, the only choice left was "Non-standard cosmology." If "Non-standard cosmology" is not suitable either for the merger, then the discussion on where to merge the page should be reopened and a suitable page should be identified. ] (]) 22:14, 17 January 2024 (UTC)
People have tried. People have failed. -RR
::Doing what you think is correct is not what consensus means. It's up to you to reopen the discussion if you don't agree. ] (]) 00:07, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
:::@] as you see, IMO this content should be on ]. It is consistent with GR but it is not GR. It calculates self-energy terms that alter the 1/r^2 so it's not general relativity. ] (]) 03:40, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
::::{{replyto|Johnjbarton}} I do not understand why you reverted, because the essence of my edit is at best tangential to the above. If this content really should be on ], then my edit is appropriate; if the content should be in this article, my edit is still appropriate. Plus the edit dealt included text on things unrelated to this particular model. Please explain what exactly it is you want to discuss, and also how it is relevant. ] (]) 07:58, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::@] Sorry I know you were trying to make an improvement. Your edits, per ], were (I gather) intended to scale the section to the other similar proposals on the page. Your edits moved the content, indicating that you too believe that this content belongs with similar proposals for alternatives to general relativity. Absent other information I would agree.
:::::However, there is another choice. The content should be moved to ] per our previous consensus and then evaluated. On that page, ] would not require as much cutting, but more important the content would not need to be in a section of non-standard/alternative/other as your edit produced. On that page the work could have a section and another sentence or so and be reasonably represented.
:::::Your edit also added to additional paragraphs without references. ] (]) 17:31, 19 January 2024 (UTC)
::::I'm with Banedon on this one: GRSI really doesn't appear to deserve more than a few sentences and one or two references, not multiple paragraphs and subsections. The other two topics Banedon added to "Other alternatives" have many many more citations (hence their own pages) and deserve a mention here, but none of them have any broad acceptance in the field. - ] (]) 08:35, 19 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::I'm not against reducing the GRSI. I'm against including it on this page. ] (]) 17:32, 19 January 2024 (UTC)
::::With all due respect, saying "alter the 1/r^2 so it's not general relativity" is not correct. 1/r^2 pertains to Newtonian gravity, not to GR. GR has a more complicated dependence in r. For example, the G^2 order correction beyond Newton is proportional to 1/r^3, see for example Bjerrum-Bohr, et al. Phys. Rev. D, 67, 084033 2003. You can also see that from the Einstein–Infeld–Hoffmann equations (en.wikipedia.org/Einstein–Infeld–Hoffmann_equations)
::::The starting point for GRSI is the Einstein-Hilbert Lagrangian, which Deur solved numerically. The only ways it is not GR is either if mistakes were made in solving the equations or if the numerical approximation is too rough. But we should not assume that (whatever our personal opinion may be) since GRSI results are published in top-tier research journals.
::::By the way, I still don't really understand why the original page for GRSI was not kept: the criterion of interest is not the number of citations of the papers in decent scholarly journals, but the interest of people (otherwise, a Misplaced Pages page on bigfoot or homeopathy would not pass the bar either). GRSI is discussed enough on forums to warrant a Misplaced Pages page explaining it. Take, for example, the wiki page on Withee (a small village in Wisconsin). A Google search for "Withee, Wisconsin" returns 31,000 hits while Deur "dark matter" returns 68,000. There are many of such Misplaced Pages pages on subjects that are less interesting (per google counts) to people than GRSI. I think you would agree that it is not easy from the papers and the forum discussion to understand what GRSI does; that (and the many forum discussions) is why I think a description of GRSI on Misplaced Pages is useful. ] (]) 16:01, 21 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::If we look at the total cosmological model, what part does GRSI change? It only changes the GR part. The papers take great effort to show that existing cosmological results are explained by GRSI. Even if GRSI is as you claim only a more accurate calculation, the natural comparison is to other calculations of GR rather than to say plasma cosmology.
:::::As for the notability argument, that needed to be made when the discussion occurred. I think generally Misplaced Pages Physics judges notability for new science almost entirely based on citation record. There is some allowance for popular (]) or historical interest (]). The critical criteria is discussion in secondary references (scientific review articles). Explaining GRSI to the public is the job of say Quanta magazine or Physics Today etc; wikipedia then summarizes that content. ] (]) 17:21, 21 January 2024 (UTC)


== Proposal to delete the section "Exotic dark matter" ==
But have they tried all? Also, who is to say there is <i>not</i> a mechanism that humans simply don't know about yet? -] 19:53, 2 Feb 2004 (UTC)


As far as I can tell the section "Exotic dark matter" is a repeat of ]. Furthermore, dark matter is already "exotic matter" so "exotic dark matter" is not a thing. The section appearing here under alternatives to Lambda-CDM is confusing: the content is not an alternative at all. ] (]) 16:59, 23 January 2024 (UTC)
:: Certainly Arp proposes his own version of the redshift, and indeed claims to have invalidated the Big Bang with the empirical data alone. For more about Hubble, read his papers and books, and also you can find this article explaining some of the history: ": Maxwell, Planck, Hubble", Brush, S.G., Am. J. Phys., vol. 70, no. 2, pp 119-27, 2002. ] 03:03, Jan 31, 2004 (UTC)
:It certainly is not. Self-interacting dark matter, warm dark matter, and fuzzy dark matter are all not standard (remember that standard dark matter is CDM, that's why it's Lambda-CDM). If anything we should delete the MACHO sentence (which would indeed behave like CDM), but to be honest I inserted because you inserted it first. ] (]) 02:17, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
::The entire first paragraph discusses lambda-CDM. ] (]) 03:18, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
::I'm fine with removing MACHOs from exotic dark matter, but now they are not mentioned in the entire article and yet they were/are-ish one of the alternatives. Seems out of whack to mention some stuff barely study and not MACHO. ] (]) 03:34, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
:::So is this supposed to be the dark matter article or the exotic dark matter section in non-standard cosmology? I don't get it. You seem to be both saying that MACHOs should be included, and saying that if we include MACHOs, we should delete the section, thereby removing MACHOs. ] (]) 09:33, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
::::Yes, that is my complaint: the section is unclear. I'll just do an edit and let you look, maybe that will be clearer. ] (]) 16:12, 24 January 2024 (UTC)


== MACHOs are non-standard cosmology. ==
:: ] ]
::: Didnt even know there was a copy online.. thanks JDR. -] 02:03, Feb 14, 2004 (UTC)
----
==Oct 2004==


I reverted an edit in which @] deleted a section on MACHOs.
Made some changes to the page to really show why astronomers don't accept non-standard cosmologies. It would be a shame if someone were to read this page and suddenly think that there was no reason for an acceptance of the standard model of cosmology. There are reasons that Lerner, Arp, and others who object to standard cosmology are dismissed, and I tried to show them as much as I can.


The purpose of this article, as far as I can tell, is to survey non-standard cosmology. As discussed in the text, considerable recent work casts doubt on the quantitative ability of the ] to explain the cosmological data that cause some to look for dark matter. Nevertheless these objects exist and are a part of the science of cosmology. The topic is significantly more notable than most of the rest of the article. It is also possible changes in measurement technology or theories could change as the results on MACHOs are still relatively recent. ] (]) 16:36, 26 January 2024 (UTC)
==Feb 2004==
:I don't see why MACHOs aren't part of Lambda-CDM. They'd simply be ]. Can you explain? ] (]) 03:09, 29 January 2024 (UTC)
::I'm confused by your point of view. According to the ]:
::* "In general, the missing baryon problem is a major unsolved problem in physics."
::The article ] never mentions MACHOs. ] (]) 15:55, 29 January 2024 (UTC)
:::How familiar are you with cosmology? Tell me if the following is too technical.
:::Lambda-CDM is Lambda (aka Dark energy) + CDM (aka cold dark matter). Dark matter is anything which obeys {{nobr|{{math|''ρ'' ∝ ''a''{{sup|−3}} }}}} where ''a'' is the scale factor (see ) (Note this phrase can be used to refer to missing baryons too). "Cold" means that it became non-relativistic very early (see ), which is necessary to match observations. MACHOs are made of baryons, which means they are cold. Any MACHO that exists today would fall under CDM and therefore Lambda-CDM. Note Lambda-CDM does not require all CDM to be made of the same substance. It could be several different things, as long as they add up to the necessary mass density. ] (]) 00:07, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
::::Thanks. If dark matter is standard cosmology and MACHOs provide an alternative explanation, then are they also standard cosmology? If MACHOs are standard cosmology, why the big fuss over them?
::::On the one hand the evidence that "MACHOs don't add up" is news: CDM still needs dark matter. But you are claiming that MACHOs are CDM. So why the news?
::::Let me put it to you a different way: should we have a paragraph on MACHOs here or in the Lambda-CMD article? Since there are not enough MACHOs, does that count for or against CMD? If MACHO failure is good for CMD, then its an alternative right? ] (]) 03:01, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::Boy, we have a massive disconnect here. Let's be clear, some number of MACHOs clearly exist, just not in sufficient numbers to explain Dark Matter. But that's not surprising, we have independent measurements that show that baryons account for no more than 5% of the universe's energy content. Since MACHOs would be made of baryons, and since Dark Matter is 27% of the universe's energy content, it's obvious that MACHOs cannot account for all of Dark Matter. (Phrased alternatively, it would have been shocking if we detected enough MACHOs to account for all of dark matter, since it implies an error in the CMB measurements.) Therefore MACHOs do not provide an "alternative explanation" for dark matter.
:::::*''should we have a paragraph on MACHOs here or in the Lambda-CMD article'' -- neither, the topic is kind of tangential.
:::::*''Since there are not enough MACHOs, does that count for or against CMD'' -- neither, it doesn't affect the conclusion at all. CDM still exists. What would have affected the conclusion is if there were enough MACHOs to account for >5% of the energy density, since as mentioned above it implies an error in the CMB measurements.
:::::*''If MACHO failure is good for CMD, then its an alternative right?'' -- again it doesn't really matter. There's no impact unless there are enough MACHOs to account for >5% of the energy density. Any number for MACHOs between 2.5% and 5% would attack the missing baryon problem, but not Lambda-CDM.
:::::] (]) 03:24, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::Further point: MACHOs were potentially a big deal in the 90s and early 2000s, before we had as precise a measure of the cosmological parameters as we do now. We knew there was dark matter, but we didn't know it was mostly non-baryonic until roughly WMAP (2005). Since then, MACHOs have been mostly ruled out as contributing to dark matter (from CMB experiments and micro lensing) and from being a significant contribution to the missing baryons (from micro lensing). They're not non-standard (since we know some do exist and they would have fit within the standard paradigm) and they're not really "alternatives" (since we know there's definitely not enough mass in MACHOs to make much difference to various "missing" things). There's some mention of them in ], which seems appropriate to me. The recent chatter about primordial black holes is interesting, because black holes aren't really baryonic, but we've also never expected there to be a large enough number of them to matter; there are a few regions of parameter space left from micro lensing surveys for primordial black holes to matter (ha!) for dark matter, but not much. - ] (]) 08:08, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
::::::I appreciate that you are both trying to make solid physics arguments, and I'm sure that they make sense to you. I'm looking at this issue as a reader of wikipedia.
::::::Are MACHOs notable? @] indicates No: so we move to should delete ]? I believe we would agree that this would fail: MACHOs are notable.
::::::Are MACHOs cosmological? Surely we can agree yes.
::::::Are MACHOs standard cosmology or not standard cosmology? Here I cannot understand your logic.
::::::* "What would have affected the conclusion is if there were enough MACHOs to account for >5% of the energy density"
::::::So you are saying that MACHOs were non-standard until they were ruled too minor, at which point they became standard? I think you are then concluding that they are "historical" and not part of the current viable non-standard cosmology? I'm fine with that, but this non-standard cosmology article is >50% in the same category. To me you are making an argument based on physics but it does not line up with the article.
::::::Our notable topic should be logically related to the cosmology articles. If MACHOs are non-standard, then we are done. If they are historical and thus not standard, then the rest of the historical material here should also be removed. If they are standard, then the short summary paragraph from this article should appear in one of the standard cosmology overviews. ] (]) 16:38, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::::How do I explain it ... Are MACHOs standard or not standard cosmology? I doubt this question is well-posed, because you likely meant something different for 'cosmology' than what cosmologists would understand when they read your question. For cosmologists (and I don't think this is terminology most cosmologists use, but it is something they will understand), a "cosmology" is a cosmological model. Lambda-CDM is this particular set of parameters within the homogeneous & isotropic universe of the Friedmann equations, which is in turn derived from General Relativity . In this context, then, MACHOs are not standard cosmology, no more than stars are standard cosmology, because they are not cosmologies. You likely mean something different, so you'd have to spell out what it is. ] (]) 03:04, 31 January 2024 (UTC)
::::::::You explanation makes perfect sense to me. However it is not relevant. By "non-standard cosmology" I mean whatever this article means, which I can only gather from the material in the article.
::::::::How would your cosmologists greet Steady state, Tired light, periodic redshift?
::::::::I also think you are considering MACHOs like say "red dwarf stars", a category for astronomical observations. I agree it looks like that now, but imagine if the observations stumbled upon much more mass than they did? If you "believe" Lambda-CDM that is inconceivable, but of course that is why we have experiments in the first place. As far as I can tell the MACHO search was motivated entirely by the idea that more such mass would challenge CDM. I am wrong about that?
::::::::Your argument has convinced me that we shouldn't have the MACHO summary where it is. Which spot in which overview article is the right spot? ] (]) 17:00, 31 January 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Steady state cosmology is a different cosmology, in the sense of the word above. It leads to a noticeably different universe from Lambda-CDM, in particular one that adheres to the perfect cosmological principle when Lambda-CDM only obeys the cosmological principle. Tired light is also a different cosmology, since it overturns Hubble expansion. Redshift quantization would also modify Lambda-CDM, since it's not easily explained within the model and presumably involves modifying Hubble expansion.
:::::::::MACHOs on their own have no impact on Lambda-CDM, in fact as pointed out above, some number of MACHOs surely exist. These would fit into the missing baryons segment of Lambda-CDM. The claim that MACHOs account for all of dark matter, however, would be non-standard. (In fact claiming that MACHOs account for more than >3% of the energy density would be nonstandard since the missing baryons are no more than 3% of the energy density. Naturally the higher this number goes the more non-standard it gets.)
:::::::::I can't say why people started searching for MACHOs, but it's the obvious thing to do. ''A priori'' dark matter can span the entirety of parameter space, and it's very helpful to exclude portions of it with microlensing. (See also Fig 2).
:::::::::I don't think MACHOs should be in this article. A mention in ] is appropriate. ] (]) 02:35, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::"I can't say why people started searching for MACHOs, "
::::::::::According to Bernard Carr's 1994 article, it was an alternative to CDM:
::::::::::* ''For a while "hot" dark matter was popular, but soon "cold" dark matter took center stage and many people still regard this as the "standard" model. In the past few years, however, attention has returned to the baryonic candidates-partly because of perceived problems in the cold model and also because there may now be direct evidence for baryonic dark matter.'' Carr, B., 1994. Ann. Rev. Astron. Astrophys., 32, 531.
::::::::::So the people started searching for MACHOs as an alternative to CDM. ] (]) 03:38, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::While I was prepared to move the MACHOs paragraph to ] on your advice, the article currently explicitly excludes any baryonic alternative.
::::::::::* ...the term "dark matter" is often used to mean only the non-baryonic component of dark matter, i.e., excluding "missing baryons".
::::::::::] (]) 03:42, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::In 1994, that was possible, yes. CMB acoustic peaks didn't come till WMAP (2005), then Planck (2013), which constrained the amount of baryonic dark matter to 5%. I don't see the relation with this article, however. ] (]) 03:44, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::I moved the content to ]; please review. ] (]) 03:50, 1 February 2024 (UTC)


=== Post-fringe-y stuff removal discussion ===
I'll try posting at the end.


Well, we're now well into the ] cycle... Looking at that paragraph again, I think it's a good fit for this article (possibly with tweaked text). MACHOs are not viable to account for dark matter, so they're "non-standard" in that sense and we should at least mention that non-viability here. There's I think an already appropriate amount of discussion of them in the dark matter article, which also says that they're not viable in the section on Baryonic matter. I think part of the problem is that this article itself is a bit of a mess (as reflected in various talk topics over the years). It's split between legitimate historical alternatives, mostly junk proposals, and legitimate current alternatives, roughly in article order. I think we could maybe just remove the entire "observational skepticism" subsection. In fact, I'll do that now and see who objects. - ] (]) 18:58, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
The problem with Arp's logic is that even if he were to demostrate that quasar redshifts are not due to the Hubble flow, that wouldn't say anything about the redshifts of normal galaxies. There is a lot of evidence that redshifts of normal galaxies are distance related (type Ia supernova) just to name one of about five (Tully-Fisher relation to name another).


:I object, I don't think it's unreasonable to at least mention PC, Arp, and tired light, although they could probably be greatly cropped since they each have their own articles and can use {{tl|main}}. Also, there's no mention of John Moffat's ] work, which is at least as interesting as MOND/TeVeS, and well-published. — ] (]) 20:24, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
As far as trying all sorts of redshift mechanisms. Yes it is possible that someone will come up with a new original redshift mechanism that will explain the galaxies, but the trouble is that there is so much data and the constraints on the mechanism are so severe, that most people don't see the point in trying. What is likely to happen is that you spend a lot of time and effort in trying to investigate a mechanism, and then after spending several months thinking about it, you find some deadly flaw. The problem then is that you've just wasted your time because a paper that says that a novel mechanism for redshift *doesn't* work is not publishable.
:In the short term I object too, but in the long term I think we need to figure out what exactly this page is about. If this page is about concepts that were at one point in time plausible cosmological models that were later ruled out, then MACHOs would certainly fit. ] (]) 00:23, 4 February 2024 (UTC)
:I'm curious what the objection to the removal of Plasma Cosmology and Arp are? Neither of those was ever a viable alternative (PC was always a joke, and Arp never had a workable model, even if he did get citations). Tired Light maybe deserves a historic mention from the ~30s, but not really anything later than that. STVG probably does deserve a mention, yes. - ] (]) 08:38, 4 February 2024 (UTC)
::Well if we take the interpretation of "Non-standard Cosmology" as cosmological models that are currently considered non-standard, then one certainly can argue that plasma cosmology and redshift quantization deserve to be included. So the question ultimately comes down to: what do we want to include in this article? There's a similar discussion above . It might be preferable to settle this via a RfC or something. ] (]) 03:19, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
:::Except plasma cosmology (PC) and redshift quantization (RQ) were never really even remotely feasible. They barely even qualified as "science", even when they were introduced, with glaring holes in their statistics, observations, and models. The various iterations of RQ didn't really form a proper cosmology, that I'm aware of, just a bunch of "look at this collection of objects, it must be interesting because they're grouped together!" At least one version of PC had some math behind it and a vaguely coherent cosmology, except it always had a scaling problem and never really did a good job explaining anything rigorously.
:::You and I both participated in that discussion above from 2021! I think a distinction we should make is that this page is about alternatives that have serious scientific backing (e.g. MOND proponents acknowledge the problems it has and try to back it up with real math); I don't know if we need a central clearing house for all the other hodgepodge ideas that people have published over the years (including PC and RQ and a variety of others)? - ] (]) 08:43, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
::::One problem I have with the page is the curious "burrowing" outline. The outer level matches the article title: non-Big Bang cosmology. But then we step down into one aspect of cosmology, non-standard-LCDM, followed by another step down into one aspect of LCDM, non-standard-GR. The non-Big Bang part was not very strong and the non-GR part is better handled in ].
::::May be the goal should be more content on "Extensions and alternatives to Lambda-CMD?" ] (]) 21:35, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
:::::If it's extensions & alternatives, MACHOs would still not be viable since they're currently observationally ruled out. If it's history, there's already a history section in the Lambda-CDM article. I'm leaning towards breaking this article into a "History of Cosmology" article, and an extensions article, then deleting this one. ] (]) 02:56, 9 February 2024 (UTC)
:I see that WP:BRD is a strategy. A strategy should have a clear aim or aims to be effective. Is that expressed anywhere for what this article should be about? I don't see it in the 'Article Policies' at the top of this page. Should I be looking elsewhere? (other that the lead section of the article itself) ] (]) 10:54, 25 March 2024 (UTC)


== ] ==
(That's one thing that keep in mind in doing literature searchs. For example, you will find almost no recent papers that try to refute Arp, because a paper that tries to refute Arp is so uninteresting that it is non-publishable. This is particularly a problem since Arp does a bad job of presenting the case against him.


We deleted the article on GRSI which was backed by a long series of articles touching on many aspects of cosmology. But now we have ] based on one paper and the news articles spun out of it. ] (]) 17:06, 16 March 2024 (UTC)
I also suspect this is why there are no papers which use plasma cosmology to calculate coorelation functions. No one can get anything that looks even remotely reasonable, and a paper arguing that plasma cosmology is *wrong* is basically not publishable because it's not interesting.)
:Ooof, yeah, that one is similarly poorly supported. The original paper at least has more than a handful of citations, but I haven't looked at those cites to see if they're of any value. - ] (]) 06:39, 17 March 2024 (UTC)
::Shockwave cosmology first came to my attention in a book by Luke Barnes and Geraint Lewis, referenced in the article. They appear to say it is plausible, but not able to be tested. However the linked theory about an alternative to dark energy does have a possible test, although I haven't been able to find out what the status of that test might be. Do you know? ] (]) 18:11, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
:::"The Cosmic Revolutionary's Handbook" by Luke Barnes and Geraint Lewis has a chapter called "BALLS FROM LEFT-FIELD" They use the shockwave model to illustrate their point "One popular misconception of the big bang model is that it describes an explosion." They point out that the shockwave cannot be tested and "This makes the model, from an observational standpoint, an unnecessary complication of the big bang theory.
:::The paper "An instability of the standard model of cosmology creates the anomalous acceleration without dark energy" linked in the ] article has 8 citations in Google Scholar, and zero of these are notable. ] (]) 18:40, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
::::Reading through "The Cosmic Revolutionary's Handbook" by Luke Barnes and Geraint Lewis, what stands out is how the descriptions of the majority of alternatives to the big bang theory end with a statement about how 'a rival falls'. Unusually, for this book, there is no similar statement about shockwave cosmology. Other ideas covered in the 'Balls from left field' chapter are also shown to fall due to evidence. Barnes and Lewis point out that there is no test for Smoller and Temple's 2003 paper, but they do not mention the related paper on dark energy that does include a proposed test, the one I ask about above. ] (]) 11:01, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
:::::IMO you are reading a lot into a minor omission. You are missing the most important overall point of the Barnes/Lewis book: the standard big bang theory is very well supported by standard physics models and no alternative model is really a contender. ] (]) 16:23, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
::::::Well, this article is about non standard cosmology. I think the fact that Smoller and Temple have made a testable prediction related to shockwave cosmology is notable. ] (]) 10:49, 25 March 2024 (UTC)


== ] ==
Of course, this is how scientific revolutions happen. The odds that the conventional redshift interpretation is wrong is low, but the odds that *something* people are certain of is wrong is quite high. A perfect example of this is between 1963-1967 when continental drift shook the geological community.


Seems recent studies suggest that Dark Energy thinking is seriously "Flawed"<ref name="NYT-20240404do">{{cite news |last=Overbye |first=Dennis |authorlink=Dennis Overbye |title=A Tantalizing ‘Hint’ That Astronomers Got Dark Energy All Wrong - Scientists may have discovered a major flaw in their understanding of that mysterious cosmic force. That could be good news for the fate of the universe. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/04/science/space/astronomy-universe-dark-energy.html |date=4 April 2024 |work=] |url-status=live |archiveurl=https://archive.ph/xOhg1 |archivedate=4 April 2024 |accessdate=5 April 2024 }}</ref> - or that Dark Energy doesn't even exist at all<ref name="SA-20240318">{{cite news |last=McRae |first=Mike |title=Physicist Claims Universe Has No Dark Matter And Is 27 Billion Years Old |url=https://www.sciencealert.com/physicist-claims-universe-has-no-dark-matter-and-is-27-billion-years-old |date=18 March 2024 |work=] |url-status=live |archiveurl=https://archive.ph/wip/WQmSW |archivedate=18 March 2024 |accessdate=5 April 2024 }}</ref><ref name="ApJ-20240315">{{cite journal |last=Gupta |first=Rajendia P. |title=Testing CCC+TL Cosmology with Observed Baryon Acoustic Oscillation Features |date=15 March 2024 |journal=] |volume=964 |issue=55 |page=55 |doi=10.3847/1538-4357/ad1bc6 |doi-access=free }}</ref> - if interested, may be relevant<ref name="NYT-20240404">{{cite news |last=Bogdan |first=Dennis |authorlink=User:Drbogdan |title=Comment - A Tantalizing ‘Hint’ That Astronomers Got Dark Energy All Wrong - Scientists may have discovered a major flaw in their understanding of that mysterious cosmic force. That could be good news for the fate of the universe. |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/04/science/space/astronomy-universe-dark-energy.html#permid=132331836 |date=4 April 2024 |work=] |url-status=live |archiveurl=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/PdSfW |archivedate=8 April 2024 |accessdate=8 April 2024 }}</ref> - in any case - Worth adding to the main "]" article - or Not? - Comments Welcome - Stay Safe and Healthy !! - ] (]) 16:04, 8 April 2024 (UTC)
However, even in these cases what usually triggers the revolution is new data (in the case of continental drift it was the Mid-Atlantic Ridge). If one wants to look at plasma cosmology, my suggestion would be to not try to fit the model to the current data, but instead argue that the current data is *wrong*. Something that would get attention is a paper that says that plasma cosmology predicts this weird effect that no one has looked for, but if you turn on a detector at YYYY, you ought to see XXXX. Something that occurs to me is that if the CMB is not primordial, then one should be able to see structure behind the CMB, and this structure ought to be much more clear if you have better detectors.


:Advertising the discussion on multiple talk pages is ok, but it would be better to keep the discussion itself on a single page; I suggest ] since it usually gathers the largest audience of interested editors. ] (]) 17:13, 8 April 2024 (UTC)
Keep in mind that the thing that made big bang the standard cosmology was that Gamov predicted the CMB decades before anyone detected it. ]


'''NOTE:''' A related discussion has been centralized on "]", and can be found at the following link => '''"]"''' - iac - Stay Safe and Healthy !! - ] (]) 22:24, 8 April 2024 (UTC)
:: As to the topic about "''paper that says that a novel mechanism for *doesn't* work is not publishable'', see: Martin, Brian, "". Society for Scientific Exploration. Journal of Scientific Exploration, Volume 12 No 4. 1998. (PDF file format)
:: IMO, solving problems and developing alternatives is not "just wasted time" ... but then many think that ]s haven't contributed anything .... ]


{{reflist-talk}} ] (]) 16:04, 8 April 2024 (UTC)
: It was first detected and measured in 1941, but it was called the "'rotational' temperature of interstellar space". See , top of page 3.
:] 06:02, 3 Feb 2004 (UTC)

There also a final irony in all of this. If you take the galaxies in Hubble's original data, and then use the most recent best data for distances and redshifts, you get a scatter plot with no descernible trend. Essentially, there is no evidence for Hubble's law in Hubble's data. -]

: Just a note on the quantized redshift comment about Arp being the only one - It was Geoffrey Burbidge who first noticed the periodicity of z=1.95, and throughout the years a small group of others also analyzed copious amounts data coming up with a list of prefered z values. As discussed in "Quasars, Redshifts, and Controversies" the group is: Burbidge and Burbidge (1967), Karlsson (1971,73,77), Barnothy and Barnothy (1976), Depaquit, Pecker, Vigier (1984). The list is as follows:
: 0.30, 0.60, 0.96, 1.41, 1.96. It was identified by Arp that there are other periodicity groupings as well, and that certains groups of quasars exhibit certain ranges of periodicity. One more thing, after spending most of the night re-reading instead of sleeping, I can add additional comments about Arp's books. Arps first book, "Q,R,C", focuses primarily on the observations, with little emphasis at all on his "variable-mass theory". It is the second book, "Seeing Red", which gives more emphasis to the theory side, along with an updated list of observations that where not included in the first book. I recommend you start with the first, it is written in a different style (ie, he seems much more focused on the observations, and less upset at the standard community than in the second book.)
: RR, again, I appreciate the dialog we have obtained. I much prefer working with you rather than against you. -] 15:44, Feb 3, 2004 (UTC)

I should not be posting this yet (because my analysis is rather non-existent, and the parts of it in my head are fragmented) but after re-reading several chapters of Arp last night, I am reminded why I think there is a connection between Plasma Cosmology (PC) and Arp's data. Throughout his first book, he is giving accounts of quasars being ejected from the nuclei of active galaxies, along filamentary structures. Arp, at the time, and possibly still today, does not see how current physics can explain some of the phenomena, which is why he is a large proponent of variable-mass and the steady-state interpretation of matter creation. What I think he might be missing is that his observations are almost perfect descriptions of what some (obviously including myself) would consider plasma related phenomena, happening on the large scale. He describes filaments (often called jets, a remnant of the non-plasma view,) along with different radiation amounts and bandwidths, all of which when seen by a laboratory scientist studying plasma, are different stages in the evolution of a plasma. He can not account for why a low redshift nuclei would emit a high redshift object, coupled with radiation from various bandwidths. But if you look in a plasma laboratory here on earth, you see the very similar phenomena happening on a much smaller time and space scale. Only recently has there been progress in understanding the redshifting mechanisms in the laboratory. It is obvious that, as you say, the standard data may be the incorrect data to use in order to verify plasma processes in the center of galaxies. However, using Arp's non-standard data, it is more obvious that plasma may play a larger role than is currently accepted. As I said, I should not continue discussing this now. However, I am tempted to resume writing a paper that I was working on 2 years ago. If I do, I would invite your peer review. -] 16:43, Feb 3, 2004 (UTC)

Just an amendment to my above paragraph. I should not claim that Arp does not see plasma processes as a useful approach to his data. In private correspondance, he admitted that some plasma models may be necessary in order to make sense of the ejection process. But where we disagreed is that a "variable-mass" plasma would be needed. In Arp's opinion, the redshift effect is due to the lower mass of the freshly ejected material, which gains mass with time (in accord with Machian physics.) In my opinion, the redshift could be due to, for now I will say 'other' means. It may not be necessary to invoke a variable mass into the plasma process. So to discredit Arp's theory completely is not fair on my part, for he CAN account for why a low-redshift nuclei might eject a high-redshift quasar, he simply accounts for it from a different viewpoint, one which is even further removed from standard physics than that of the plasma cosmology. At this point, I can make no claim that he is in fact <i>wrong</i>, however intuition tells me that there may be a simpler way to account for his data. Ok, enough typing, now i must finish a quantum mechanics problem set which is due tommorrow.. yippity skippity.. -] 18:00, Feb 3, 2004 (UTC)

Of course, in no way am I the first one to think that it is plasma phenomena governing galaxies... Re-reading papers by Peratt, and also Alfvens books, it seems most of what I said in the above 2 paragraphs has been stated already, one way or another, in far better detail. In fact, there are two main reasons I stopped writing a summary paper:
1) its safe to assume only a couple journals would consider publishing it ("Astrophysics and Space Science", "IEEE Trans. Plasma Science", or Apeiron)
2) most of what I would have to say has already been said before, in great detail (except maybe the connections with the most recent lab based redshift mechanisms)
- ] 22:27, Feb 3, 2004 (UTC)

A quote from above "So quasars and normal galaxies are connected. So what? Quasar redshifts are due to the Flubberizoch effect, and don't invalidate Hubble flow of normal galaxies. -]"
What is the Flubberizoch effect? I searched journals, databases, the web, and nothing returns a hit. Please give a reference so that I may investigate it. -] 17:42, Feb 11, 2004 (UTC)



-----

==Awaiting citation==
The following parenthetical remark has been been moved from the preamble because, although it may be true, some citation is needed:

:(which may not be true, since steady state models correctly predicted the proper value of the CMB long before Gamow and collaborators)

Citation is needed because there are plenty of quotations such as this one:

:"Unfortunately, the Steady-State theory finds it virtually impossible to explain either the light elements or the CMB, both of which require the universe to have been much different in the past than it is today, namely very hot. For this reason, all but the most rabid fanatics gave up the Steady-State theory around 1965 with the discovery of the CMB."
(Attributed to Tony Rothman, General Relativity professor at Harvard.)

] 07:34, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)

: Though I didn't put that in (anon editor 24.236 did) ... I'll look up a reference ... ] 10:21, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)
: As a follow up ... it seem that Edward Guillaume, Paul Hertz, Erhard Regener (1933), and Arthur Stanley Eddington ("The Internal Constitution of the Stars". Diffuse Matter in Space. 1926.) predicted the proper value of the CMB. This was on the basis of a steady-state Universe in equilibrium of an infinite duration. Also Fritz Zwicky, Erwin Findlay-Freundlich, and Max Born did so . More to come ... ] 13:13, 29 Jan 2004 (UTC)

My abstract database is currently not functioning (upgrading linux and havent had time to redo the mySQL tables..) But I have found more than one paper describing the histroy of the cmb predictions and as soon as I get my database back up, Ill search for the citations and post at least the important one. One important paper I found showed how values where predicted (not nec. by "steady-staters", but also not discluding them) throughout the 1900's, and that these values where much closer to the correct value than those predicted by Gamow and collaborators. The same paper also detailed the history of the predictions by Gamow, showing how they actually diverged from the correct value as the years progressed. Anyhow, give me time I will work on the database over spring break. I find almost all my papers using INSPEC and the Nasa Astrophysics Data System, you just have to use the right keywords to find the non-standard ones. ] 02:51, Jan 31, 2004 (UTC)

In the meantime, I felt this page needed some fixing up. I changed the order of some parts, fixed a lot of grammar, inserted more accurate wording, etc. This page now better reflects what is meant by a non-standard cosmology. Im going to do something with the very first paragraph someday, it seems it could use better wording. ] 22:35, Jan 31, 2004 (UTC) --follow up: reworded the entire Preamble

<b>Citation:</b> I have my bibliography database running again. On the comment about Gamow's predictions diverging from correct values, and non-standard cosmologies predicting correct CBR values (keep in mind back when the non-standard models made these predictions, they where not considered non-standard,) please see -
Assis, A.K.T. and Neves, M.C.D., <i>"The redshift revisited"</i>, Astrophys. Space Sci., Vol. 227, #1-2, pp13-24, 1995
] 04:29, Feb 7, 2004 (UTC)

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==Grammar/spelling notes==

We should agree on a standard for capitalization of Big Bang and plasma cosmology. Sometime I use capitols, sometimes not, and I wonder what the convention should be. Im inconsistent with plasma cosmology too, but I think usually it is not nec. to capitolize it. Also, I was editing when peak was, and I accidentally saved over his fixes. So I went back to what he fixed, THEN continued my edits. EXCEPT for one thing: since "alternative" is actually defined in the article, we should use "alternate" to describe the steady-state, because it does not fall under the articles definition of alternative. ] 21:40, Feb 1, 2004 (UTC)
::: The Big Bang "event" and "theory" should be referred to using capital letters. One reason is that when we speak of the Big Bang, we're speaking of a named event, like "the Fourth of July holiday" (as opposed to: the fourth of July holiday"). Similarly, we might write: "Festinger's Cognitive Dissonance Theory is a theory of cognitive dissonance." ] 05:01, 3 Feb 2004 (UTC)
::The confusion with alternate <-> alternative is cleared up. It was my own mistake to think that alternative was being defined when in fact it wasnt. Removed the section heading altogethor as it was unnecessary and wasnt actually defining anything. The contents of that section are still in the same place, and convey the same point, without the heading. sorry Peak, should have thought harder about it before changing your edit ]

::: When someone sees the light, it is cause for celebration, not apologies! ] 05:01, 3 Feb 2004 (UTC)


-----

==Dark energy non-standard?==

I don't really understand why dark energy is included here. While it is a very new idea (in its modern, repulsive form), the observational evidence for it is sufficiently compelling that most working cosmologists now accept it as part of the standard model of the universe (the so-called "Concordance Cosmology"). I've rewritten the dark energy section (which seemed to be deeply confused between dark energy and dark matter, another now-standard idea) but I'm not sure it should be here at all. -- ]

:I don't know why it is here either. But I didn't want to remove it myself as I had already revamped the rest of the article, and just kind of stopped. It seems to me that the whole 'dark' scenario has indeed been taken up by the standard, and is not a key ingredient in the usual non-standard models, hence should be removed from the non-standard page. Now that you have re-written the section, it seems better, but it should still be clarified as to why it is included in the article. If by chance it was somehow there to lend discredit to the standard, it should be removed. -] 02:08, Mar 3, 2004 (UTC)

:Another note- in fact, if you are a Plasma Cosmologist, dark matter and dark energy is basically a myth that arose from negligence of electro-magnetic forces on the large scale. -] 02:13, Mar 3, 2004 (UTC)

::Oh no, I'm definitely not a Plasma Cosmologist. But the dark stuff is pretty much standard these days, so I think I'll revamp that part of this article soon. But not immediately; I want to write a page on ] first (mainstream cosmologists have pretty much settled on a model of the universe now -- 70% Dark Energy, 27% dark matter, 3% baryonic matter -- though there are still plenty of unanswered questions) and this material or sthg similar could probably go there. --] 09:31, 3 Mar 2004 (UTC)

-----

I see the page has been nicely trashed again, to make the big bang stand out again. WTF, this page is NOT about the big bang. You know, i dont care anymore. have it your way, you have removed perfectly valid sentences and replaced with trash. i give up on this -] 17:00, May 12, 2004 (UTC)

I am SOOO tempted to do a revert. So im just warning you now. revert.. revert... Back to the coherent version that talked less about big bang and more about non-standard!!!! -] 22:26, May 13, 2004 (UTC)

----

==Is ] real? ==

Despite that the effect is known since 1985 there is no official agreement on its viability because of seemingly not enough cosmological redshift for the expansion of space and the GTD together. But is it a good enough reason for denying the reality of the effect if it is required by conservation of energy? Isn't it just replacing the conservation of energy with expansion of the universe for no good reason at all? ] 19:25, 30 Jul 2004 (UTC)

== Interesting new film ==

This is not a plug, just a heads up. I've been following this topic closely since Lerner published "The Big Bang Never Happened" in 1990 (with a title like that, who am I to leave it on the library shelf unread?!) and monitoring this and related pages for a while.

I've just bought the DVD of the newly released Universe film by Randall Meyers from http://www.universe-film.com/ which nicely summarises much of the dissenting opinion from within cosmology and astrophysics, eg. Peratt, Lerner, Alfven, Arp, Hoyle, Assis, Narlikar, Pecker, et al.

Whilst I'm not necessarily buying all of the viewpoints expressed, I found a couple of particularly interesting points that arise in the film.

One is Lerner's concise explanation in under 2 minutes of how the CMB temperature and smoothness can be explained as the absorption and reemission of radiation by dust as IR, and how that explanation predicts a more rapid distance-related decline of galaxy emission in the radio spectrum compared with IR (that is, at increasing distances, galaxies appear to emit less radio while their IR emission is held constant). This is the same effect as trying to see distant on-coming car headlights in a fog.

:: So he claims. The problem with that explanation is that if you have a dust model you'd expect to see some lumpiness due to the initial emission of the radiation and because the dust itself will be lumpy. Personally, I don't see how you can combine lumpy galaxies causes by EM, and not get huge amounts of non-lumpiness in the dust. An even bigger problem is polarization. It's really hard to see how you can get non-polarized radiation from reflection.


Another is the photographic and other data of Arp, brilliantly portrayed and jaw-dropping when seen in moving pictures, that shows the consistent relationship between quasar fields and nearby galaxies, in particular the decreasing redshift of the quasars with increasing distance from the associated galaxy.

:: Most astrophysicists think that Arp isn't selecting his data randomly.

Part of this sequence was the brightness/redshift chart for galaxies, which shows the strong relationship that Hubble deduced his distance law from, but the same chart for quasars shows NO SUCH RELATION.

:: And the standard explanation is that you don't get this relation with quasars because the quasars aren't standard candles.

We are forced to conclude that there is a non-distance component to quasar redshift, but it seems nobody wants to know.

:: Which there is. Quasars have wildly different brightnesses, and there are a huge number of
other effects.

Not really wanting to add fuel to fire here, but this whole issue seems to come down to dogmatism and a refusal to look down Galileo's telescope. If data do not fit our theory, then it is our duty to question everything, including all assumptions, until they do. Inventing ever more exotic epicycles with no supporting observational data just straps everyone to the hospital bed.

:: The problem here is that the movie presented one side of an argument. There are a lot of standard responses to these issues, and a lot of responses to the responses, and responses to the responses to the responses. It may be that non-standard cosmologists are right and most astronomers are wrong (i.e. see ] of an example in which a crackpot theory turned out to be right). However it is *NOT* the case that astrophysicists support standard cosmologies out of blind dogmatism.

:: One problem is that non-standard cosmologies don't form a single coherent theory and non-standard cosmologies disagree with each other as much as they do with standard cosmologies.

] 17:52, 3 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Cheers,
]

==Modifications==
I reverted part of the preamble back to the more coherent explanation which i created months ago but had been subsequently censored by others. A link to the standard model (big bang) was added in the paragraph so that proponents of that theory will be happy, i hope. I also removed 2 disclaimers that where added by BB proponents while i was away. I tend to not add to the BB article any disclaimers (however i have added a very clear one in bold attention in the BB talk page,) i would appreciate it if BB props please respect this.-] 16:24, Sep 2, 2004 (UTC)

Rearranged and renamed some section headings. How on earth an article on non-standard cosmology conatined only one main heading titled "standard cosmology", i will never understand. it is better now. I also removed a redundant section or two. -] 16:44, Sep 3, 2004 (UTC)

------------------

Changed it as follows:

1) The statement that a non-standard cosmology is not merely one that contradicts big bang is incorrect. The definition of non-standard cosmology is *any* cosmology that is not big bang.

2) The statement that recent developments have shaken belief in standard cosmology needs to be
attributed. Most astrophysicists simply do not believe that recent observations have brought
the big bang into question. (If you want to challenge that statement, we can do a survey of papers in ApJ or preprints in arxiv.org.)

] 16:56, 3 Sep 2004 (UTC)

------

Actually, I think the article is terrible because it does a horrible job surveying
non-standard cosmologies. It spends *way* too much time talking about Arp, and
doesn't mention some of the non-standard cosmologies that people are really interested
in.

Most of the recent papers on non-standard cosmology I've read are actually on the
QSSM model.

] 17:16, 3 Sep 2004 (UTC)


-----

Removed this link which isn't about non-standard cosmology at all........

* Jedamzik, Karsten, "''''". ], Garching.


Also, I think the thing to do is to take the review of non-standard cosmology from Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics and incorporate it into wikipedia. That was a *really* good article.

The QSSM model needs to be expanded a lot because that it the non-standard cosmology that seems to have the most professional interest right now. QSSM has some good answers for nucleosynthesis issues, and also judging from the papers in archvix, they are the people who are most active in trying to deal with the new cosmological data that is coming in.

] 17:39, 3 Sep 2004 (UTC)

:So what is the Flubberizoch effect? you still have not answered and I still cant find it documented anywhere. -] 18:51, Sep 3, 2004 (UTC)

:RR, I disagree with your #2: "2) The statement that recent developments have shaken belief in standard cosmology needs to be attributed. Most astrophysicists simply do not believe that recent observations have brought the big bang into question. (If you want to challenge that statement, we can do a survey of papers in ApJ or preprints in arxiv.org.) - ] 16:56, 3 Sep 2004 (UTC)"

:So are you saying that the foundations of the big bang are not at all in question?

:::: Not by most of the papers that are currently being written in ApJ.

: and then you also state in the article that the big bangers KNOW about the problems and objections?

:::: Yes. And the consensus among astrophysicists in 2004, is that all of the problems and objections can be handled without questioning the foundations of the big bang. Now this doesn't mean that the consensus is correct. The consensus has been wrong before. In 1960, most geologists thought the plate tectonics was a nutty idea.

: you contradict yourself and expect ME to prove it! it isnt going to work that way. If the big bang was not in question, recently or not, would this article exist?

:::: Of course. There should be encyclopedia articles on all sorts of theories. However, an article on non-standard cosmologies needs to simply include the fact that most astronomers don't take them seriously as of 2004 and the reasons why they don't take them seriously. The scientific community has been known to be *wrong*, and it wouldn't surprise me very much if a decade from now everyone is laughing at themselves at how the data was misinterpreted for a non-existent big bang.

: The statement does NOT need to be attributed. Besides, if you want attribution, look at what someone added under the "objections to the big bang" section. You can go ahead and search ApX all you want. Im busy. And statements such as (schematically) "this is a minority view, the majority believe in the standard big bang" should not be inserted. it is already stressed SEVERAL times in the article that Big BAngers such as yourself think that us non-standards are wrong. you dont see me going into the big bang article and adding discalimers, do you?

:::: Maybe you should if you think the disclaimers are appropriate. For example, it would be useful if you go through the evidence for the big bang and list alternate interpretations of the evidence.

no, cause i respect that space. On a different note, I do agree that each different cosmology needs its space in this article. And lets not forget, the only reason Arp made it to this article already is cause YOU moved him here from the plasma page! With time this page will continue to improve. I agree more needs to be said about as many non-standard cosmologies as we can do. In the mean time, im removing the section titled Alfven Universe cause this is all covered in the plasma cosmology page.

:::: The trouble is that there are a lot of different and conflicting plasma cosmologies of which the Alfven universe is only one. Historically and philosophically, the Alfven universe is extremely important because it represents a very interesting and signficant approach to the problem, and so it should get a lot of space. -RR

::::: no doubt, which is only why i removed the heading which contained an empty body. the alfven model can come back in once it is summarized nicely, instead of left blank. and roadrunner, i see you are back at interrupting other's posts to get the upper hand, rather than obtaining paragraph dialog..-] 20:51, Sep 21, 2004 (UTC)


Yes this page is still a mess, but we can work to clean it continuously. -] 20:36, Sep 3, 2004 (UTC)

:Ok, I like what you did with the pre-amble, concerning the multiplicities of cosmologies. I changed some wording (mostly for grammatical reason and clarity.) I removed another small and obvious disclaimer, that non-standard cosmologists are a tiny part of the community. That much is obvious. I hope we can agree now on the paragraph. -] 20:55, Sep 3, 2004 (UTC)

== Please don't make it up ==

Flubberizoch effect? Is that some sort of joke? If you can't provide papers or evidence, don't just make it up. In other news, while trawling around on arxiv, there are some interesting papers by Martin Lopez-Corredoira from Brazil. A particularly interesting one questioning the redshift expansion is . I've toyed with ], but someone beat me to it a month earlier with ]. - ] 05:17, 5 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Will whoever it is who is editing this page please get yourself a log in so we can discuss the article, instead of this endless to-ing and fro-ing. I'm quite prepared to discuss things, but not if you insist on hiding behind an IP address. I already stated at the beginning of the article that a local redshift mechanism is not clearly understood. - ] 01:16, 15 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Someone removed the mentioning of Redshift periodicity in the article. It will soon be re-inserted. Must I remind you of something I posted many months ago above on this very page? it reads:
::"Just a note on the quantized redshift comment about Arp being the only one - It was Geoffrey Burbidge who first noticed the ::periodicity of z=1.95, and throughout the years a small group of others also analyzed copious amounts data coming up with a list of ::prefered z values. As discussed in "Quasars, Redshifts, and Controversies" the group is: Burbidge and Burbidge (1967), Karlsson ::(1971,73,77), Barnothy and Barnothy (1976), Depaquit, Pecker, Vigier (1984). The list is as follows:
::0.30, 0.60, 0.96, 1.41, 1.96. It was identified by Arp that there are other periodicity groupings as well, and that certain
::groups of quasars exhibit certain ranges of periodicity... "

Since this was NEVER disproved, when I have time I will translate the above information into suitable form for insertion into article. Unless someone else wants to do it first... -] 14:26, Sep 16, 2004 (UTC)

Quantization of redshifts was roundly disproved by an agreed upon test advocated by Burbidge and leaders of the 2dF survey. Burbidge made a prediction that quasars in the survey would show quantization. 2dF showed that they did not. This is basically the death-knell for quantization of redshifts. -user unknown

:well that is ok, and this means that we can include both the first proposed quantization AND its refutation in the article. Can you please point me to the papers in which the proposal is discussed? rather, you could begin to add this yourself. Basically quantization of redshift is going back into the article, and so we could also add the 2df suirvey results after the initial discoveries are explained.-] 14:26, Sep 16, 2004 (UTC)

:::: Also there have been several major galaxy surveys since 2dF. None of them show any sign of quasar clustering around galaxies or any sort of quantization. The other point is that you need to identify which Burbidge. There are two major astronomers named Burbidge, one who is a strong advocate of non-standard cosmology (the quasi steady state model) and one who isn't. The two of them happen to be married to each other.

] 19:13, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)

-----
Hi there, I have reworked most of the edits and put back your changes (sorry about the edit clash, I wasn't immediately sure what to do as I am still new to Misplaced Pages). I have stated quite clearly where theory is lacking, it does not need to be reinforced with large hammers! :-) Ionized, I'm going abroad for a week, so I'll leave it for you in case we end up stepping on each other's toes again.

Also, this talk page has exceeded 32K, what does that mean and what shall we do about it? Happy hacking - ] 02:55, 15 Sep 2004 (UTC)

: the exceeding 32k thing just means we need to break up our page into more sections, which we have been doing. this way if people with ancient comps cant edit the entire page, they can at least edit individual sections. so it is not a problem. you dont step on my toes at all, your edits have greatly clarified many issues which needed to be done. I agree that greatly reinforcing the infantile and under-developed nature of our theories should not be done. It is most obvious by now that this is NON standard, so I remove as many disclaimers as i can, all of which have been inserted by BB proponents. Its amazing how the BB props wear their thick BB glasses when looking at the non standard models. If only we could get them to look at it while their thick vision altering lenses are removed...

:::: You aren't aware of the results of one of the major galaxy redshift surveys and then you go around and argue that proponents of the big bang are acting out of ideological blindness? The major thrust of observation cosmology in the last ten years has been doing statistical work on the CBR and galaxy redshift surveys.
:::::(all from within the standard paradigm, as if it will point to anything but the big bang-] 20:44, Sep 21, 2004 (UTC))
:::: You can get big bang models to fit those statistics (you have to do some fudging but you can get it to fit). I'm not aware of any plasma cosmology model that even starts to come close. QSSM is taken a bit more seriously because they are aware of the data and are trying to get QSSM to fit.

:::: My gut feeling is that if you try to calculate a power spectrum from a plasma cosmology, you will get a power law dependence on scale, which is what you get whenever you look at the power spectrums of things that we know have to do with plasma. It's hard for me to see how a plasma process can get the spectrum you see in galaxy surveys or more to the point the CBR. If you can point me to a preprint where someone has even tried, I'd be appreciative.

::::: Please go ahead and give it a try!-] 20:51, Sep 21, 2004 (UTC)

: Jon, could you please research the redshift periodicity so that we can add this back into the article? i simply dont have time. good place to start are the papers by Burbidge etc listed above. ohhh, and you should check out the "Center for Magnetic Self-Organization in Plasmas", a new NSF and DOE funded multi-disciplinary center which was founded in 2003. Im soon applying for grad work there, as it is one of the few places where active plasma astrophysics research is happening.

:::: You have to distinguish between plasma astrophysics and plasma cosmology. There are lots of places where plasma astrophysics is going on, and its hard in fact to find a non-cosmological process in astrophysics in which plasma isn't involved.

:::: ] 19:29, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)

-] 16:41, Sep 15, 2004 (UTC)

Did anyone actually READ Lerner's 1990 ApJ article? If they had, they would have known about local vs intervening magnetic field interactions, and not vandalised the article. This is a '''NON STANDARD''' cosmology page, therefore there will be gaps in the proposed theories. We have stated this at the top of the article. Please discuss things first before anonymously wading in and cocking up the article. I'm more than happy to say that X dne Y, but we want to compose the text so that it is easy to follow, not read like a drunken slanging match in a university clubroom. Cheers, ] 15:19, 16 Sep 2004 (UTC)


----

Removed this

:::: However, this point is highly subjective, as any physics may be considered either exotic or not, dependent on that persons view. Another point worth mentioning is that no human model of the universe can truly be complete and in final form, when communicated.

Maybe this needs to be clarified but the term exotic physics means things that we haven't observed directly in the laboratory. Also, I don't see the second sentence as being relevant or even true.

] 19:40, 21 Sep 2004 (UTC)


-----

Changed the wording of the objections to the standard model. The previous wording seemed to imply that
the issues raised by the open letter were under dispute when they aren't.

] 13:10, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

== Dark matter ==

Also the discussion of dark matter needs to be revised. The situation is as follows.
Big bang cosmologies require huge amounts of dark matter to work. This issue is
completely independent of galaxy rotation curves. The fact that there seems to be
a requirement for dark matter that is completely independent of the big bang is one
of the reasons why most astronomers think that the BB is on the right track.

:Please explain why and how dark matter is independent of Big Bang models, as I find that difficult to believe. - ] 14:53, 24 Sep 2004 (UTC)

:: The observations of of galactic rotational curves/velocity dispersions are only one way to get at the mass of systems. One can and does also use gravitational lensing and X=Ray temperature measurements of clusters to obtain masses. Then all you need to do is apply the normal mass-to-light ratio to see if the measurements agree. They don't. Every measurement we have of mass that is independent of the mass-to-light emission ratios that we get from normal matter shows that there is about 90% more matter in the universe than stuff that interacts with light (atomic and plasma matter). That's completely independent of the Big Bang model which predicts, from the positions and strengths of acoustic peaks in the CMB, a similar abundance of dark matter. Not to mention that the hierarchical model of structure formation also relies on dark matter to work. So there are a number of ways that the Big Bang predicts dark matter and there are a number of independent measurements of dark matter that are in concordance with the predictions.

The other fact is that the amount of dark matter than BB cosmologies require is
much larger than the amount of "missing matter" is need to resolve the galaxy
rotation curves.

] 13:13, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

== POV warning ==

Can somebody clarify to which point "The neutrality of this article is disputed" applies? It seems to me, the POV warning realtes to a much older version of the article and should be removed. --] 12:29, 2005 Feb 14 (UTC)

==Edits by anon user==

I cannot for the life of me figure out why the edits that were made by the last annonymous user are considered better. A wholesale revert has been done, if there are any objections, please talk about them here. ] 29 June 2005 14:56 (UTC)

Please, I implore the anonymous user to write their objections here. ] 4 July 2005 21:45 (UTC)

For interested parties, there is a decent article in the 2 July 2005 New Scientist on page 30 covering non-standard cosmology. ] 05:06, 11 July 2005 (UTC)

:Would it be possible to reference some other publication other than that bullyrag? ] 05:21, 11 July 2005 (UTC)

:: It's a reasonably fair report on the June 2005 Crisis in Cosmology conference in Portugal. The URL for the conference is http://www.cosmology.info/2005conference/ For instance, it refers to a recent relativistic MOND solution (see ), some criticism of BB from Scarpa (globular cluster star motions) and Lerner (plasma cosmology), WMAP anomalies reported by Magueeijo et al., High redshift galaxies with dusty lanes, etc. The original is subscription only. ] 09:38, 11 July 2005 (UTC)

:::Thanks for the direct link. ] 13:05, 11 July 2005 (U


Wow reading this a year after last coming here is kind of a trip... I still laugh at the "the survey shows it supports big bang" type stuff,,, no kidding huh? of course it supports BB it was designed through the eyes of BB!!

==Wholesale deletions==

Whole sections of this article have been deleted - which just proves the point I was making about the "orthodoxy" of the Big Bang theory. This is the ''non-standard cosmology'' page for goodness sake! One section deleted for being "undocumented and frivolous" was my assertion that "a healthy skepticism and an ongoing and wide-ranging debate about alternatives is felt by some to be better". I would have thought this was the whole basis of science! Science progresses by a coolly skeptical approach and a weighing up of all alternatives, not by sticking rigidly to one theory. In cosmology, one of the deepest and most mysterious of subjects, there should be 5 or 10 theories constantly compared and contrasted. Some parts of some theories may seem implausible, but the relative implausibilities have to be weighed up.

In the Big Bang theory, for example, one has to explain (a) the initial Big Bang, (b) inflation, (c) dark matter, (d) dark energy.
In the Quasi-Steady State theory, one has to explain (a) matter creation, (b) the CMB.
In some forms of static Universe theory, one has to explain (a) "tired light" redshift, (b) "tired gravity", (c) the abundance of light elements.

The Big Bang theory is having problems. This needs to be faced up to. Dark matter, dark energy and inflation are all totally unproved and speculative. I particularly like the part of the Big Bang article about dark matter particles, which states that "several projects to detect them are underway". In other words, "we have no evidence whatsoever for them".

I made the point about the (relatively) very close Andromeda Galaxy having its estimated distance drastically increased - to illustrate how a relatively approximate science cosmology still is.

On the Cosmological Principle, this has been used completely erroneously in the past, when successively the Earth, the Solar System and the Milky Way Galaxy were thought to be the entire Universe. There is no reason why the largest structures we ''currently know'' should necessarily be the largest structures in existence, and this needs to be borne in mind.

Let's keep debating. In a skeptical scientific way, of course!

Chris

] 18:31, 4 September 2005 (UTC)

::Whether the Big Bang theory is having problems or not is not the issue. Your inclusions were personal research and not documented, as is most of what you are writing here. Moreover, your insistence about the largest structures we currently know should be necessarily the largest structures in existence has no relevence to the article. Nobody is saying that there aren't larger structures out there due to the Cosmological Principle -- in fact it's the observation that there is statisically no formations larger than superclusters which are said to be the first vindications of isotropy in the universe. Not to say that this won't be found to be incorrect in the future, but your attempt to address this in the article was entirely spurious. ] 23:13, 4 September 2005 (UTC)

==Non-standard versus standard==
Regarding this paragraph...
<table border=1 bgcolor=white cellspacing=0 cellpadding=1><tr><td>
], ], ], and ] are all terms used to describe ideas that are proposed that are considered by the ] to either lack explanatory power or are incomplete compared to the accepted ]. All the ideas discussed in this article have been described as these things at various times. Some of the ideas were at one time considered possible explanations but have since been dismissed in favor of the ]. Other ideas have never had wide acceptance. All nonstandard cosmologies rely on a rejection of the major features of the Big Bang which are considered problematic by the proponents of the ideas for a number of reasons ranging from ] to claimed ]. Proponents of these ideas often invoke past ] where the dominant ] was rejected in favor of a new idea to lend credibility to their beliefs. As ] said, "Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence", and making a claim that any one proponent is akin to ] or ] tends to be met with incredulity by scientists.</table>

... Doesn't this somewhat imply that ''all'' non-standard theories are Pseudoscience, fringe science, bad science, and junk science, as considered by the ''whole'' scientific community, for reasons from religion to skepticism?

That would seem to imply that (a) genuine scientists can't do genuine scientific work, that happens to turn out incorrect, and (b) only standard cosmology is true science (c) Only accepted knowledge is scientific.

Is this a neutral point of view? --] 16:59, 23 September 2005 (UTC)

:It is true that all of these ideas are one of those things. That is basic NPOV. The least "offensive" to the sensibilities of the proponents is probably the term '']'' which makes no value judgements with regards to whether the idea is really scientific or not, but simply points out its minority status. Your statement that this statement implies something other than it says doesn't seem to be backed up by the actual text. ] 14:26, 24 September 2005 (UTC)

::The implication is that the genuine scientific study of any non-standard cosmology is either pseudoscience, fringe science, bad science, and junk science. If we take plasma cosmology, which is investigated by professional scientists in a sceintific manner... what makes any part of plasma cosmology either pseudoscience, fringe science, bad science, or junk science? --] 18:50, 24 September 2005 (UTC)

:::That's not an implication, it's directly said. Any study, be it scientific or otherwise, is in the context of the ideas being one of those things. Plasma cosmology is fringe science at best. ] 02:09, 25 September 2005 (UTC)

The fact that the near-consensus of physicists is that the big bang view is the best available cosmological model, and the basic features of the model have been sufficiently confirmed that there is little likelihood of any change in the central features of the model. That alone makes those investigating alternatives to the big bang fringe science. It is just the same as biologists investigating alternatives to natural selection, geologists investigating alternatives to plate tectonics, etc... There is a broad scientific consensus. Regardless of what you, personally, think about the big bang, or the motives of those scientists, the ''existence'' of the consensus is indisputable. This is acknowledged clearly in the website (that someone will invariably try to direct me to as evidence of widespread dissent): "Today, virtually all financial and experimental resources in cosmology are devoted to big bang studies. " &ndash;] 20:55, 24 September 2005 (UTC)

:In the same way that Big Bang cosmology was fringe science when it was first proposed? And presumably every new theory is fringe science since there is no consensus, and the field of study is very small? --] 22:31, 24 September 2005 (UTC)

::Yes, precisely. The Big Bang, when Lemaitre proposed it, was definitely fringe science. Every new theory that is made in response to a majority theory of the scientific community is necessarily fringe science. ] 02:07, 25 September 2005 (UTC)

:::That's fine then, though depsite my own objections for the Big Bang theory, I wouldn't lump it with pseudoscience, fringe science, bad science, or junk science. --] 09:19, 25 September 2005 (UTC)

::::I wouldn't either, seeing as how it is not the time of Lemaitre and Einstein, but it is 2005. ] 12:12, 26 September 2005 (UTC)

The paragraph serves no purpose other than to taint nonstandard cosmology. While it is ostensibly written using the trappings of the neutral point of view, it comes across as far from neutral. It's a thinly veiled tarring and feathering of nonstandard ideas. That's why I removed much of it. Furthermore, it's vague "all of the ideas ... have been described as these things at various times". Oh really? This kind of sloppy broad brush smear is not the NPOV. Also, the use of the passive voice "have been dismissed" ... by whom? --here the paragraph hides behind a semblance of objectivity. Also, why is "claimed" scientific skepticism... it isn't the NPOV to add "claimed" just to cast doubt on the sincerity or competency of the claimants. See the Misplaced Pages guidelines on NPOV for this. I intend to delete this section again rather than edit it to neutrality, since it's very presence is a deviation from neutrality.

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Recent non-standard cosmology theories?

This article explains that non-standard cosmologies (arguments against the Big Bang) are much less and less published in mainstream science journals as time goes on. I believe this is true. In the last ten years if you look for non-standard cosmologies hardly any appear in established peer-reviewed science journals. They always appear in fringe journals. The Misplaced Pages article on Non-standard cosmology doesn't mention any new theories. Nothing in the last 30 years etc.

There is a long list of non-standard cosmologies here. These are extreme fringe ideas published by mostly non-scientists in fringe journals or self-published. Psychologist Guy (talk) 11:53, 3 February 2021 (UTC)

Remember, the article lists MOND, f(R) gravity, and TeVeS. These are genuine theories. They are fringe compared to Lambda-CDM, but they are still genuine theories. You claim they are not published in established peer-review science journals, are you claiming the Astrophysical Journal is not an established peer-reviewed science journal? It published this paper just a few months ago. What about this, published in Physical Review Letters? If they are published less it's because fewer cosmologists work on them, not because they are bad science. You could make the argument that the article should not list these theories, but if you claim that they are "extreme fringe ideas published by mostly non-scientists in fringe journals or self-published", you are incorrect. Banedon (talk) 12:05, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
There is a distinction to be made between alternative theories for parts of Lambda-CDM and completely new cosmologies. Historically, there were a variety of cosmologies which denied the FLRW metric which neither MOND/TeVeS nor f(R) do. Also, it's important to acknowledge that the alternatives do not get the same level of exposure as the standard CDM explanations. jps (talk) 12:13, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
I still cannot accept the paragraph - it says "Big Bang opponents often ignore well-established evidence from newer research ..." but how many of the theories listed on the page are actually denying the Big Bang? It's extremely unfair to associate people working on many of the theories on the page with denying the Big Bang, some of them might even treat that association as an insult. Tying things to "denying the FLRW metric" does not work either, because you can still have the Big Bang without FLRW, e.g. this paper which challenges one of the core assumptions of FLRW is absolutely respectable science and was published in a respectable journal . Again as long as the article lists respectable non-standard cosmologies, it should not have that paragraph. Banedon (talk) 12:28, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
No, I did not say they are never published in established peer-review science journals. The source I cited said that alternatives to the Big Bang are less and less frequently published in peer-reviewed journals. This is exactly the case. The papers you have listed are not what I would have in mind as a non-standard cosmology, they are just modified gravity theories. I don't think we should confuse non-standard cosmological models which challenge the Big Bang with modified gravity theories which are alternatives to just the cold dark matter model. I believe the "alternative gravity" section should edited to reflect this. The Tensor–vector–scalar gravity is not an alternative to the Big Bang. It's originator Jacob Bekenstein is a supporter of the Big Bang. Nor is f(R) gravity an alternative to the Big Bang etc. These are modified gravity theories, they are not alternative cosmologies to the Big Bang they are compatible with it. Of course, non-standard cosmologies sometimes make use of alternative or modified gravity theories but it is incorrect to this cite these as non-standard cosmologies. None of the authors you cited dispute the Big Bang and are proposing an entirely new cosmological model. Can you actually show a paper in a well respected peer reviewed journal that disputes the Big Bang specifically and proposes an alternative in the last 5 years? Very few papers of this kind have been published in the last 10 years. I see a lot of electric universe stuff but none of it makes it to peer review. Psychologist Guy (talk) 12:30, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
Are you arguing that modified gravity theories are not non-standard cosmologies? If so, are you also arguing that they don't belong on this page and therefore should be deleted? Banedon (talk) 12:33, 3 February 2021 (UTC)

It's hard to say. There are extravagant extensions to MOND which are absolutely non-standard cosmologies and, to be sure, many MOND papers and talks start out with a reference to cosmology rather than dark matter (which I've always found weird, but anyway). I think MOND, f(R), and TeVeS deserve inclusion here, but they are more successful at straddling the mainstream/fringe divide than essentially all the other topics on the page. This is the problem with a page where the inclusion criteria is just "not standard". jps (talk) 13:28, 3 February 2021 (UTC)

Also, challenging late-time isotropy does not, in itself, challenge the FLRW metric. Indeed, the paper authors you cite assume FLRW background because, I suppose, they have nothing else to replace it with. This is hardly "Big Bang denial" of the same sort then. jps (talk) 13:38, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
Banedon I think it depends on how we define non-standard cosmology, I am defining it like the author of the article I linked to, basically an alternative to the Big Bang model. Technically you are right because any model that challenges the ΛCDM model might be termed a "non-standard cosmology" by default, such as modified Newtonian dynamics, entropic gravity or any theory of modified gravity but I don't think that is what is in mind when readers check out our article on non-standard cosmology which talks about alternatives to the Big Bang such as the steady state theory. I also checked a bunch of textbooks that mention "non-standard cosmology", that term is not always used but when it is, it refers to cosmological models that challenge the Big Bang not just one aspect of it. We have an article Alternatives to general relativity. Maybe we need to create an article "Alternative to the Big Bang" where we list the Steady-state model, plasma cosmology and others. However, is there really any point because it would be a historical article. There doesn't appear to be any recent scientific alternatives that we can add references for.
I think it is confusing to list MOND, f(R) gravity, and TeVeS with the steady state and plasma cosmology etc because those researchers are not denying the Big Bang like plasma cosmology theorists. Even if you disagree, one observation of mine that I don't think you will deny is that this article is grossly out of date. Are there any modern alternative cosmology models that challenge the Big Bang? Our article mentions Fred Hoyle and Jayant V. Narlikar on a revised steady state model but that was 25 or 30 years ago and Eric Lerner's plasma cosmology was 20 odd years ago. What new information could be added to the article to improve it? Ethan Siegel talks here about how there are no recent alternatives to the Big Bang "The last adherents to the ancient, discredited alternatives are at last dying away. The Big Bang is no longer a revolutionary endpoint of the scientific enterprise; it's the solid foundation we build upon. Its predictive successes have been overwhelming, and no alternative has yet stepped up to the challenge of matching its scientific accuracy in describing the Universe". The non-standard cosmology I am talking about appears to be a dead field. The source I originally added to the article notes that it rarely is published in peer review. Hopefully you agree on that. Psychologist Guy (talk) 15:35, 3 February 2021 (UTC)

Arguably eternal inflation-like theories are anti-Big Bang as would any theory that avoided a Big Bang singularity, but these are technical differences which probably do not deserve lumping. To be honest, I've always been a little uncomfortable with this article. It started out as a holding place for people who wanted their "alternatives to the Big Bang" ideas expounded upon (and you can see them scattered throughout the archives). There is a place for this kind of contextual information, but most of the article's topics were firmly fringe 15 years ago and today it's such a backwater as to be almost quaint. To the extent that anything is relevant to modern scholarship, it is those ideas that focus on niggling doubts regarding small parts of the theory... quantum gravity considerations, problems with the dark sector, inflation, etc. We may very well be looking at two different subjects here and spinning out might not be terrible. An article on dark sector alternatives might accommodate the F(r), TeVeS, and MOND ideas more naturally than "nonstandard cosmology". We can include a very brief mention of them and link over there. jps (talk) 16:02, 3 February 2021 (UTC)

I agree, for me the article is confusing certain topics together as one. I think someone needs to sort this mess out. I would support the creation of a new article or merging certain content into another. It seems this article was quite controversial 10 years ago but now has low-traffic, so I don't think it would be controversial to move content into another article. Interestingly I looked at the creation of this article, its been around since 2003 and the first editor defined non-standard cosmology as "any cosmological theory which argues that the big bang theory is incorrect" , over the years many different editors have lumped together many different theories. The outcome is a confusing article. Most users probably don't have time to fix this issue but I believe it should be sorted. Psychologist Guy (talk) 16:20, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
Just to chime in, I think splitting this into "old, totally fringe, and/or nonsense ideas" and "modern legitimate alternatives" is a good idea. What exactly to call those articles I'm less certain. I've been a Misplaced Pages astronomy/cosmology page watcher since the mid-2000s and the last few years have had a marked reduction in fringe peddlers. It's been rather pleasantly boring, and means that cleaning these up should be easier. I think such a separation would be worthwhile from an encyclopedic standpoint: Arp, Tired Light, and Plasma Cosmology really don't belong on the same page as MOND and the original steady state, for example. - Parejkoj (talk) 20:03, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
I have a soft-spot for Zwicky's original flavor tired light, but that story is less well-known than original flavor steady state, for sure. jps (talk) 20:39, 3 February 2021 (UTC)
It will be hard to draw a clear line between the two, because as jps mentioned, eternal inflation is also currently a legitimate theory without a "Big Bang" (in the traditional sense of the word). How about doing this: focus on the reputable alternative theories on this page, and have a small section with "old/debunked theories" with links to the main articles? Banedon (talk) 11:58, 4 February 2021 (UTC)
This has normally been the "fringe" article and I think its name indicates as much. While I am all in favor of WP:WEIGHTing the saner proposals in Misplaced Pages generally, I'm not sure this is the article to do that. Unless there has been movement in the literature towards using the term "non-standard cosmology" to mean anything vaguely at odds with vanilla Lambda-CDM. jps (talk) 12:19, 4 February 2021 (UTC)
I gotta say, although I still believe the sentence should not be included (and I think associating MOND, TeVeS etc with "non-standard cosmology" is defensible), I also think there are bigger priorities than fixing this article, e.g. a standalone article on Hubble tension. It doesn't look like any of us can actually spare the time to rewrite this article, either. Banedon (talk) 01:16, 9 February 2021 (UTC)

I have been digging a bit more into MOND to see how to distinguish it from other cosmological approaches. Right now, I'm not convinced it is so easily demarcated from other fringe proposals. Sure, it has far more "mainstream" champions than, say, plasma cosmology, but on the other hand its successes are constrained almost entirely to galactic dynamics and it is entirely unclear how it would be incorporated into a cosmological theory that excised CDM, for example. I just went down a little bit of a rabbit hole in Stacey McGaugh and David Merritt's work and see this as a glaring issue that both of them more-or-less tacitly acknowledge (Pawel Kroupa less so). Interestingly, then, the framing for novel cosmological approaches in terms of MOND really is not being done in the academic journals yet. The sentence, interestingly, still is rather accurate for it. f(R) theories, on the other hand, basically are only bandied about in PRL-type papers so in the context of those ideas there is less of an argument. Interestingly, a lot of f(R) theories ignore MOND entirely since they start from the action on the relativity side which is one of the "aesthetic" arguments against TeVeS. jps (talk) 13:19, 10 February 2021 (UTC)

Yeah, MOND has the glaring problem of "how do you explain the CMB?" with no good answer that I'm aware of. It is possible to come up with theories that reduce to MOND in some limit, though. Example. I would certainly call any cosmology based on this relativistic MOND theory a non-standard cosmology. Banedon (talk) 00:44, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
Wow, what a mess! It would be basically impossible to write a coherent "intermediate level" explanation for structure formation or the CMB on the basis of that. We could, perhaps, reframe this article to make that point explicit: it's the cosmologies that are based on MOND that are non-standard. And, additionally, they are not in the journals. Also, I found this to be as close as possible to a bird's eye view of the situation. jps (talk) 13:35, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
I reorganized the lede to try to relegate Big Bang denial to an era that precedes Lambda-CDM. This may help matters a bit? jps (talk) 13:46, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
Aaand... now I reorganized the entire article. The Big Bang-denying versus Big Bang-accepting cosmologies are now disambiguated for the most part. (Not sure about Dirac Large Number Hypothesis, actually... don't think anyone is taking that idea seriously). jps (talk) 14:21, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
I wrote a fair amount of new text and deleted some others (as jps mentioned I don't think anyone is taking Dirac Large Number Hypothesis seriously). I still think we should not highlight theories that deny the Big Bang in the lede - at this point it is a historical artefact, and the article as it is places (in my opinion fully justified) much more emphasis on modifications to Lambda-CDM and to GR. Banedon (talk) 06:35, 25 February 2021 (UTC)

I think this is fair. To decide whether to excise Big Bang denial completely is an interesting question. We could create a new article such as Historical opposition to the Big Bang where it might be more clearly couched and then we might avoid thornier issues. If/when we spin-out that first section into an article like that, we could reinvigorate an article like alternative cosmologies which could include the ones in the second and third sections. That might be a better way forward? jps (talk) 16:23, 28 March 2021 (UTC)

Alternative organizations

I wonder if there could be a better way to present this material. @OwenX

"Non-standard" is literally negative ("not-standard"), and I think most non-scientist readers will assume that this label is equal to fringe. However we have no theory that explains the finding which lead to the hypothesis of dark matter, including ΛCDM. The 'standard' is just the most conservative one; the alternatives are not necessarily fringe. The article Non-standard cosmology is a hodge-podge of things which necessarily will be incoherent (to be sure it is less incoherent than many articles!).

But what would be better? I think the "Alternatives to XX" approach is more neutral and already in use for Alternatives to general relativity and it is used in the section names here. This immediate points to an issue with this article: one of the sections is "Alternatives and extensions to Lambda-CDM" but Lambda-CDM is supposed to the Standard Cosmology, so that non-standard cosmology would be "Alternatives and extensions to Lambda-CDM" right? Furthermore, Lambda-CDM is described as the mathematical model for the Big Bang theory so are these two things or one thing? Are the alternatives two things or not?

So perhaps breaking out "Alternatives to Big Bang theory" and "Alternatives to Lambda-CDM" and summarizing them here would allow this article to better explain the interconnections between these subjects. Then this article would be "Alternative cosmologies" Johnjbarton (talk) 01:25, 23 December 2023 (UTC)

I'm fine with renaming this page to "Alternatives to Lambda-CDM" or "Alternatives to standard cosmology". Dark_energy#Other_mechanism_driving_acceleration also has some relevant content which may benefit from a "See also" to here. Of course, we'll have to do this all over again once astrophysicists come up with a better model that doesn't require as many fudge factors and cheat days, or in our case, cheat 10 seconds... Owen× 12:48, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
I don't really see the problem with "non-standard". It's about ideas that, well, aren't standard. If anything, "Alternatives to..." sounds a bit too positive; it carries the suggestion that the "alternatives" are all viable, which not all of them are. XOR'easter (talk) 17:40, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
Echoing this: Non-standard cosmologies are mostly not viable, that's why they're not the standard model. This has been a dumping-ground for a bunch of fringe stuff (I forgot that the sections on redshift periodicity and plasma cosmology was so long: that should be drastically trimmed), which is unfortunate, and probably wouldn't be fixed by renaming it to "Alternatives", unless you plan to just remove all the fringe stuff with that rename? - Parejkoj (talk) 18:46, 26 December 2023 (UTC)
Not all non-viable alternatives are notable, but some are, for historical, approximate, or pedological reasons, eg Newton's law of universal gravitation ;-) Plus (briefly) discussing the reasons for non-viable theories is itself helpful in clarifying what makes a successful theory. So I think the viability issue can be dealt with. Johnjbarton (talk) 19:47, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
I don't object to covering the empirically disfavored theories; as you say, they can be of historical interest or have other aspects that make them noteworthy. But if we're going to have both the disproved and the respectable-but-niche ideas all in the same page, I'm inclined to "non-standard" more than I am to "alternative". Of course, that's just my sense of the connotations. XOR'easter (talk) 20:34, 23 December 2023 (UTC)
That wording just hides the negation. Logically, it is still there because "alternative to X" implies "is not X". --Hob Gadling (talk) 07:37, 24 December 2023 (UTC)

GRSI merge

@‎Peterjol In my opinion the consensus was merge into Alternatives to general relativity not this page. Johnjbarton (talk) 02:46, 7 January 2024 (UTC)

There were two proposals: "Alternatives to general relativity" and "Non-standard cosmology." Merging into "Alternatives to general relativity" would be patently wrong, as GR-SI claims it is within General Relativity. For example, one of its papers has the title "An explanation for dark matter and dark energy consistent with the Standard Model of particle physics and General Relativity." Therefore, the only choice left was "Non-standard cosmology." If "Non-standard cosmology" is not suitable either for the merger, then the discussion on where to merge the page should be reopened and a suitable page should be identified. Peterjol (talk) 22:14, 17 January 2024 (UTC)
Doing what you think is correct is not what consensus means. It's up to you to reopen the discussion if you don't agree. Johnjbarton (talk) 00:07, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
@Banedon as you see, IMO this content should be on Alternatives to general relativity. It is consistent with GR but it is not GR. It calculates self-energy terms that alter the 1/r^2 so it's not general relativity. Johnjbarton (talk) 03:40, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
@Johnjbarton: I do not understand why you reverted, because the essence of my edit is at best tangential to the above. If this content really should be on Alternatives to general relativity, then my edit is appropriate; if the content should be in this article, my edit is still appropriate. Plus the edit dealt included text on things unrelated to this particular model. Please explain what exactly it is you want to discuss, and also how it is relevant. Banedon (talk) 07:58, 18 January 2024 (UTC)
@Banedon Sorry I know you were trying to make an improvement. Your edits, per WP:UNDUE, were (I gather) intended to scale the section to the other similar proposals on the page. Your edits moved the content, indicating that you too believe that this content belongs with similar proposals for alternatives to general relativity. Absent other information I would agree.
However, there is another choice. The content should be moved to Alternatives to general relativity per our previous consensus and then evaluated. On that page, WP:UNDUE would not require as much cutting, but more important the content would not need to be in a section of non-standard/alternative/other as your edit produced. On that page the work could have a section and another sentence or so and be reasonably represented.
Your edit also added to additional paragraphs without references. Johnjbarton (talk) 17:31, 19 January 2024 (UTC)
I'm with Banedon on this one: GRSI really doesn't appear to deserve more than a few sentences and one or two references, not multiple paragraphs and subsections. The other two topics Banedon added to "Other alternatives" have many many more citations (hence their own pages) and deserve a mention here, but none of them have any broad acceptance in the field. - Parejkoj (talk) 08:35, 19 January 2024 (UTC)
I'm not against reducing the GRSI. I'm against including it on this page. Johnjbarton (talk) 17:32, 19 January 2024 (UTC)
With all due respect, saying "alter the 1/r^2 so it's not general relativity" is not correct. 1/r^2 pertains to Newtonian gravity, not to GR. GR has a more complicated dependence in r. For example, the G^2 order correction beyond Newton is proportional to 1/r^3, see for example Bjerrum-Bohr, et al. Phys. Rev. D, 67, 084033 2003. You can also see that from the Einstein–Infeld–Hoffmann equations (en.wikipedia.org/Einstein–Infeld–Hoffmann_equations)
The starting point for GRSI is the Einstein-Hilbert Lagrangian, which Deur solved numerically. The only ways it is not GR is either if mistakes were made in solving the equations or if the numerical approximation is too rough. But we should not assume that (whatever our personal opinion may be) since GRSI results are published in top-tier research journals.
By the way, I still don't really understand why the original page for GRSI was not kept: the criterion of interest is not the number of citations of the papers in decent scholarly journals, but the interest of people (otherwise, a Misplaced Pages page on bigfoot or homeopathy would not pass the bar either). GRSI is discussed enough on forums to warrant a Misplaced Pages page explaining it. Take, for example, the wiki page on Withee (a small village in Wisconsin). A Google search for "Withee, Wisconsin" returns 31,000 hits while Deur "dark matter" returns 68,000. There are many of such Misplaced Pages pages on subjects that are less interesting (per google counts) to people than GRSI. I think you would agree that it is not easy from the papers and the forum discussion to understand what GRSI does; that (and the many forum discussions) is why I think a description of GRSI on Misplaced Pages is useful. Peterjol (talk) 16:01, 21 January 2024 (UTC)
If we look at the total cosmological model, what part does GRSI change? It only changes the GR part. The papers take great effort to show that existing cosmological results are explained by GRSI. Even if GRSI is as you claim only a more accurate calculation, the natural comparison is to other calculations of GR rather than to say plasma cosmology.
As for the notability argument, that needed to be made when the discussion occurred. I think generally Misplaced Pages Physics judges notability for new science almost entirely based on citation record. There is some allowance for popular (Cold fusion) or historical interest (Hollow earth). The critical criteria is discussion in secondary references (scientific review articles). Explaining GRSI to the public is the job of say Quanta magazine or Physics Today etc; wikipedia then summarizes that content. Johnjbarton (talk) 17:21, 21 January 2024 (UTC)

Proposal to delete the section "Exotic dark matter"

As far as I can tell the section "Exotic dark matter" is a repeat of Dark matter. Furthermore, dark matter is already "exotic matter" so "exotic dark matter" is not a thing. The section appearing here under alternatives to Lambda-CDM is confusing: the content is not an alternative at all. Johnjbarton (talk) 16:59, 23 January 2024 (UTC)

It certainly is not. Self-interacting dark matter, warm dark matter, and fuzzy dark matter are all not standard (remember that standard dark matter is CDM, that's why it's Lambda-CDM). If anything we should delete the MACHO sentence (which would indeed behave like CDM), but to be honest I inserted because you inserted it first. Banedon (talk) 02:17, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
The entire first paragraph discusses lambda-CDM. Johnjbarton (talk) 03:18, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
I'm fine with removing MACHOs from exotic dark matter, but now they are not mentioned in the entire article and yet they were/are-ish one of the alternatives. Seems out of whack to mention some stuff barely study and not MACHO. Johnjbarton (talk) 03:34, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
So is this supposed to be the dark matter article or the exotic dark matter section in non-standard cosmology? I don't get it. You seem to be both saying that MACHOs should be included, and saying that if we include MACHOs, we should delete the section, thereby removing MACHOs. Banedon (talk) 09:33, 24 January 2024 (UTC)
Yes, that is my complaint: the section is unclear. I'll just do an edit and let you look, maybe that will be clearer. Johnjbarton (talk) 16:12, 24 January 2024 (UTC)

MACHOs are non-standard cosmology.

I reverted an edit in which @Banedon deleted a section on MACHOs.

The purpose of this article, as far as I can tell, is to survey non-standard cosmology. As discussed in the text, considerable recent work casts doubt on the quantitative ability of the massive compact halo objects to explain the cosmological data that cause some to look for dark matter. Nevertheless these objects exist and are a part of the science of cosmology. The topic is significantly more notable than most of the rest of the article. It is also possible changes in measurement technology or theories could change as the results on MACHOs are still relatively recent. Johnjbarton (talk) 16:36, 26 January 2024 (UTC)

I don't see why MACHOs aren't part of Lambda-CDM. They'd simply be missing baryons. Can you explain? Banedon (talk) 03:09, 29 January 2024 (UTC)
I'm confused by your point of view. According to the missing baryons:
  • "In general, the missing baryon problem is a major unsolved problem in physics."
The article Lambda-CDM model never mentions MACHOs. Johnjbarton (talk) 15:55, 29 January 2024 (UTC)
How familiar are you with cosmology? Tell me if the following is too technical.
Lambda-CDM is Lambda (aka Dark energy) + CDM (aka cold dark matter). Dark matter is anything which obeys ρa where a is the scale factor (see ) (Note this phrase can be used to refer to missing baryons too). "Cold" means that it became non-relativistic very early (see ), which is necessary to match observations. MACHOs are made of baryons, which means they are cold. Any MACHO that exists today would fall under CDM and therefore Lambda-CDM. Note Lambda-CDM does not require all CDM to be made of the same substance. It could be several different things, as long as they add up to the necessary mass density. Banedon (talk) 00:07, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
Thanks. If dark matter is standard cosmology and MACHOs provide an alternative explanation, then are they also standard cosmology? If MACHOs are standard cosmology, why the big fuss over them?
On the one hand the evidence that "MACHOs don't add up" is news: CDM still needs dark matter. But you are claiming that MACHOs are CDM. So why the news?
Let me put it to you a different way: should we have a paragraph on MACHOs here or in the Lambda-CMD article? Since there are not enough MACHOs, does that count for or against CMD? If MACHO failure is good for CMD, then its an alternative right? Johnjbarton (talk) 03:01, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
Boy, we have a massive disconnect here. Let's be clear, some number of MACHOs clearly exist, just not in sufficient numbers to explain Dark Matter. But that's not surprising, we have independent measurements that show that baryons account for no more than 5% of the universe's energy content. Since MACHOs would be made of baryons, and since Dark Matter is 27% of the universe's energy content, it's obvious that MACHOs cannot account for all of Dark Matter. (Phrased alternatively, it would have been shocking if we detected enough MACHOs to account for all of dark matter, since it implies an error in the CMB measurements.) Therefore MACHOs do not provide an "alternative explanation" for dark matter.
  • should we have a paragraph on MACHOs here or in the Lambda-CMD article -- neither, the topic is kind of tangential.
  • Since there are not enough MACHOs, does that count for or against CMD -- neither, it doesn't affect the conclusion at all. CDM still exists. What would have affected the conclusion is if there were enough MACHOs to account for >5% of the energy density, since as mentioned above it implies an error in the CMB measurements.
  • If MACHO failure is good for CMD, then its an alternative right? -- again it doesn't really matter. There's no impact unless there are enough MACHOs to account for >5% of the energy density. Any number for MACHOs between 2.5% and 5% would attack the missing baryon problem, but not Lambda-CDM.
Banedon (talk) 03:24, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
Further point: MACHOs were potentially a big deal in the 90s and early 2000s, before we had as precise a measure of the cosmological parameters as we do now. We knew there was dark matter, but we didn't know it was mostly non-baryonic until roughly WMAP (2005). Since then, MACHOs have been mostly ruled out as contributing to dark matter (from CMB experiments and micro lensing) and from being a significant contribution to the missing baryons (from micro lensing). They're not non-standard (since we know some do exist and they would have fit within the standard paradigm) and they're not really "alternatives" (since we know there's definitely not enough mass in MACHOs to make much difference to various "missing" things). There's some mention of them in Dark matter, which seems appropriate to me. The recent chatter about primordial black holes is interesting, because black holes aren't really baryonic, but we've also never expected there to be a large enough number of them to matter; there are a few regions of parameter space left from micro lensing surveys for primordial black holes to matter (ha!) for dark matter, but not much. - Parejkoj (talk) 08:08, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
I appreciate that you are both trying to make solid physics arguments, and I'm sure that they make sense to you. I'm looking at this issue as a reader of wikipedia.
Are MACHOs notable? @Banedon indicates No: so we move to should delete Massive compact halo object? I believe we would agree that this would fail: MACHOs are notable.
Are MACHOs cosmological? Surely we can agree yes.
Are MACHOs standard cosmology or not standard cosmology? Here I cannot understand your logic.
  • "What would have affected the conclusion is if there were enough MACHOs to account for >5% of the energy density"
So you are saying that MACHOs were non-standard until they were ruled too minor, at which point they became standard? I think you are then concluding that they are "historical" and not part of the current viable non-standard cosmology? I'm fine with that, but this non-standard cosmology article is >50% in the same category. To me you are making an argument based on physics but it does not line up with the article.
Our notable topic should be logically related to the cosmology articles. If MACHOs are non-standard, then we are done. If they are historical and thus not standard, then the rest of the historical material here should also be removed. If they are standard, then the short summary paragraph from this article should appear in one of the standard cosmology overviews. Johnjbarton (talk) 16:38, 30 January 2024 (UTC)
How do I explain it ... Are MACHOs standard or not standard cosmology? I doubt this question is well-posed, because you likely meant something different for 'cosmology' than what cosmologists would understand when they read your question. For cosmologists (and I don't think this is terminology most cosmologists use, but it is something they will understand), a "cosmology" is a cosmological model. Lambda-CDM is this particular set of parameters within the homogeneous & isotropic universe of the Friedmann equations, which is in turn derived from General Relativity . In this context, then, MACHOs are not standard cosmology, no more than stars are standard cosmology, because they are not cosmologies. You likely mean something different, so you'd have to spell out what it is. Banedon (talk) 03:04, 31 January 2024 (UTC)
You explanation makes perfect sense to me. However it is not relevant. By "non-standard cosmology" I mean whatever this article means, which I can only gather from the material in the article.
How would your cosmologists greet Steady state, Tired light, periodic redshift?
I also think you are considering MACHOs like say "red dwarf stars", a category for astronomical observations. I agree it looks like that now, but imagine if the observations stumbled upon much more mass than they did? If you "believe" Lambda-CDM that is inconceivable, but of course that is why we have experiments in the first place. As far as I can tell the MACHO search was motivated entirely by the idea that more such mass would challenge CDM. I am wrong about that?
Your argument has convinced me that we shouldn't have the MACHO summary where it is. Which spot in which overview article is the right spot? Johnjbarton (talk) 17:00, 31 January 2024 (UTC)
Steady state cosmology is a different cosmology, in the sense of the word above. It leads to a noticeably different universe from Lambda-CDM, in particular one that adheres to the perfect cosmological principle when Lambda-CDM only obeys the cosmological principle. Tired light is also a different cosmology, since it overturns Hubble expansion. Redshift quantization would also modify Lambda-CDM, since it's not easily explained within the model and presumably involves modifying Hubble expansion.
MACHOs on their own have no impact on Lambda-CDM, in fact as pointed out above, some number of MACHOs surely exist. These would fit into the missing baryons segment of Lambda-CDM. The claim that MACHOs account for all of dark matter, however, would be non-standard. (In fact claiming that MACHOs account for more than >3% of the energy density would be nonstandard since the missing baryons are no more than 3% of the energy density. Naturally the higher this number goes the more non-standard it gets.)
I can't say why people started searching for MACHOs, but it's the obvious thing to do. A priori dark matter can span the entirety of parameter space, and it's very helpful to exclude portions of it with microlensing. (See also Fig 2).
I don't think MACHOs should be in this article. A mention in dark matter is appropriate. Banedon (talk) 02:35, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
"I can't say why people started searching for MACHOs, "
According to Bernard Carr's 1994 article, it was an alternative to CDM:
  • For a while "hot" dark matter was popular, but soon "cold" dark matter took center stage and many people still regard this as the "standard" model. In the past few years, however, attention has returned to the baryonic candidates-partly because of perceived problems in the cold model and also because there may now be direct evidence for baryonic dark matter. Carr, B., 1994. Ann. Rev. Astron. Astrophys., 32, 531.
So the people started searching for MACHOs as an alternative to CDM. Johnjbarton (talk) 03:38, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
While I was prepared to move the MACHOs paragraph to dark matter on your advice, the article currently explicitly excludes any baryonic alternative.
  • ...the term "dark matter" is often used to mean only the non-baryonic component of dark matter, i.e., excluding "missing baryons".
Johnjbarton (talk) 03:42, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
In 1994, that was possible, yes. CMB acoustic peaks didn't come till WMAP (2005), then Planck (2013), which constrained the amount of baryonic dark matter to 5%. I don't see the relation with this article, however. Banedon (talk) 03:44, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
I moved the content to dark matter; please review. Johnjbarton (talk) 03:50, 1 February 2024 (UTC)

Post-fringe-y stuff removal discussion

Well, we're now well into the WP:BRD cycle... Looking at that paragraph again, I think it's a good fit for this article (possibly with tweaked text). MACHOs are not viable to account for dark matter, so they're "non-standard" in that sense and we should at least mention that non-viability here. There's I think an already appropriate amount of discussion of them in the dark matter article, which also says that they're not viable in the section on Baryonic matter. I think part of the problem is that this article itself is a bit of a mess (as reflected in various talk topics over the years). It's split between legitimate historical alternatives, mostly junk proposals, and legitimate current alternatives, roughly in article order. I think we could maybe just remove the entire "observational skepticism" subsection. In fact, I'll do that now and see who objects. - Parejkoj (talk) 18:58, 1 February 2024 (UTC)

I object, I don't think it's unreasonable to at least mention PC, Arp, and tired light, although they could probably be greatly cropped since they each have their own articles and can use {{main}}. Also, there's no mention of John Moffat's STVG/MOG work, which is at least as interesting as MOND/TeVeS, and well-published. — Jon (talk) 20:24, 1 February 2024 (UTC)
In the short term I object too, but in the long term I think we need to figure out what exactly this page is about. If this page is about concepts that were at one point in time plausible cosmological models that were later ruled out, then MACHOs would certainly fit. Banedon (talk) 00:23, 4 February 2024 (UTC)
I'm curious what the objection to the removal of Plasma Cosmology and Arp are? Neither of those was ever a viable alternative (PC was always a joke, and Arp never had a workable model, even if he did get citations). Tired Light maybe deserves a historic mention from the ~30s, but not really anything later than that. STVG probably does deserve a mention, yes. - Parejkoj (talk) 08:38, 4 February 2024 (UTC)
Well if we take the interpretation of "Non-standard Cosmology" as cosmological models that are currently considered non-standard, then one certainly can argue that plasma cosmology and redshift quantization deserve to be included. So the question ultimately comes down to: what do we want to include in this article? There's a similar discussion above . It might be preferable to settle this via a RfC or something. Banedon (talk) 03:19, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
Except plasma cosmology (PC) and redshift quantization (RQ) were never really even remotely feasible. They barely even qualified as "science", even when they were introduced, with glaring holes in their statistics, observations, and models. The various iterations of RQ didn't really form a proper cosmology, that I'm aware of, just a bunch of "look at this collection of objects, it must be interesting because they're grouped together!" At least one version of PC had some math behind it and a vaguely coherent cosmology, except it always had a scaling problem and never really did a good job explaining anything rigorously.
You and I both participated in that discussion above from 2021! I think a distinction we should make is that this page is about alternatives that have serious scientific backing (e.g. MOND proponents acknowledge the problems it has and try to back it up with real math); I don't know if we need a central clearing house for all the other hodgepodge ideas that people have published over the years (including PC and RQ and a variety of others)? - Parejkoj (talk) 08:43, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
One problem I have with the page is the curious "burrowing" outline. The outer level matches the article title: non-Big Bang cosmology. But then we step down into one aspect of cosmology, non-standard-LCDM, followed by another step down into one aspect of LCDM, non-standard-GR. The non-Big Bang part was not very strong and the non-GR part is better handled in Alternatives to general relativity.
May be the goal should be more content on "Extensions and alternatives to Lambda-CMD?" Johnjbarton (talk) 21:35, 6 February 2024 (UTC)
If it's extensions & alternatives, MACHOs would still not be viable since they're currently observationally ruled out. If it's history, there's already a history section in the Lambda-CDM article. I'm leaning towards breaking this article into a "History of Cosmology" article, and an extensions article, then deleting this one. Banedon (talk) 02:56, 9 February 2024 (UTC)
I see that WP:BRD is a strategy. A strategy should have a clear aim or aims to be effective. Is that expressed anywhere for what this article should be about? I don't see it in the 'Article Policies' at the top of this page. Should I be looking elsewhere? (other that the lead section of the article itself) Hewer7 (talk) 10:54, 25 March 2024 (UTC)

Shockwave cosmology

We deleted the article on GRSI which was backed by a long series of articles touching on many aspects of cosmology. But now we have Shockwave cosmology based on one paper and the news articles spun out of it. Johnjbarton (talk) 17:06, 16 March 2024 (UTC)

Ooof, yeah, that one is similarly poorly supported. The original paper at least has more than a handful of citations, but I haven't looked at those cites to see if they're of any value. - Parejkoj (talk) 06:39, 17 March 2024 (UTC)
Shockwave cosmology first came to my attention in a book by Luke Barnes and Geraint Lewis, referenced in the article. They appear to say it is plausible, but not able to be tested. However the linked theory about an alternative to dark energy does have a possible test, although I haven't been able to find out what the status of that test might be. Do you know? Hewer7 (talk) 18:11, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
"The Cosmic Revolutionary's Handbook" by Luke Barnes and Geraint Lewis has a chapter called "BALLS FROM LEFT-FIELD" They use the shockwave model to illustrate their point "One popular misconception of the big bang model is that it describes an explosion." They point out that the shockwave cannot be tested and "This makes the model, from an observational standpoint, an unnecessary complication of the big bang theory.
The paper "An instability of the standard model of cosmology creates the anomalous acceleration without dark energy" linked in the shockwave cosmology article has 8 citations in Google Scholar, and zero of these are notable. Johnjbarton (talk) 18:40, 23 March 2024 (UTC)
Reading through "The Cosmic Revolutionary's Handbook" by Luke Barnes and Geraint Lewis, what stands out is how the descriptions of the majority of alternatives to the big bang theory end with a statement about how 'a rival falls'. Unusually, for this book, there is no similar statement about shockwave cosmology. Other ideas covered in the 'Balls from left field' chapter are also shown to fall due to evidence. Barnes and Lewis point out that there is no test for Smoller and Temple's 2003 paper, but they do not mention the related paper on dark energy that does include a proposed test, the one I ask about above. Hewer7 (talk) 11:01, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
IMO you are reading a lot into a minor omission. You are missing the most important overall point of the Barnes/Lewis book: the standard big bang theory is very well supported by standard physics models and no alternative model is really a contender. Johnjbarton (talk) 16:23, 24 March 2024 (UTC)
Well, this article is about non standard cosmology. I think the fact that Smoller and Temple have made a testable prediction related to shockwave cosmology is notable. Hewer7 (talk) 10:49, 25 March 2024 (UTC)

Dark Energy is Flawed or Nonexistent?

Seems recent studies suggest that Dark Energy thinking is seriously "Flawed" - or that Dark Energy doesn't even exist at all - if interested, my related pubished NYT comments may be relevant - in any case - Worth adding to the main "Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument" article - or Not? - Comments Welcome - Stay Safe and Healthy !! - Drbogdan (talk) 16:04, 8 April 2024 (UTC)

Advertising the discussion on multiple talk pages is ok, but it would be better to keep the discussion itself on a single page; I suggest WT:PHYS#Dark Energy is Flawed or Nonexistent? since it usually gathers the largest audience of interested editors. Jähmefyysikko (talk) 17:13, 8 April 2024 (UTC)

NOTE: A related discussion has been centralized on "physics Wikiproject", and can be found at the following link => "Misplaced Pages talk:WikiProject Physics/Archive April 2024#Dark Energy is Flawed or Nonexistent?" - iac - Stay Safe and Healthy !! - Drbogdan (talk) 22:24, 8 April 2024 (UTC)

References

  1. Overbye, Dennis (4 April 2024). "A Tantalizing 'Hint' That Astronomers Got Dark Energy All Wrong - Scientists may have discovered a major flaw in their understanding of that mysterious cosmic force. That could be good news for the fate of the universe". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 4 April 2024. Retrieved 5 April 2024.
  2. McRae, Mike (18 March 2024). "Physicist Claims Universe Has No Dark Matter And Is 27 Billion Years Old". ScienceAlert. Archived from the original on 18 March 2024. Retrieved 5 April 2024.
  3. Gupta, Rajendia P. (15 March 2024). "Testing CCC+TL Cosmology with Observed Baryon Acoustic Oscillation Features". The Astrophysical Journal. 964 (55): 55. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ad1bc6.
  4. Bogdan, Dennis (4 April 2024). "Comment - A Tantalizing 'Hint' That Astronomers Got Dark Energy All Wrong - Scientists may have discovered a major flaw in their understanding of that mysterious cosmic force. That could be good news for the fate of the universe". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 8 April 2024. Retrieved 8 April 2024.

Drbogdan (talk) 16:04, 8 April 2024 (UTC)

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