Note from Creation Vol 26 No. 4 According to BBC News, 31 May 2004
Interestingly we find that most evolutionists and progressive creationists believe that the big bang occurred 13.7 billion years ago. So how big would we expect the universe to be? Even if the universe expanded at the speed of light, then the radius of the universe should be 13.7 billion light-years as an upper limit, so the width of the universe is 27.4 billion light-years, right?
Wrong!
From new data collected from a space probe examining the Cosmic Background Radiation, astronomers estimate the universe is at least 156 billion light-years wide. Actually, it's long been known that the universe was a lot wider than 27.4 billion light-years; this latest research tells us how much wider.
According to researchers writing in the journal Physics Review Letters, the universe must have expanded much faster than light in its early stage. An atheistic physicist, Alan Guth proposed this over 20 years ago - the 'inflation' model. It's no wonder that 33 leading scientists have published an 'Open Letter to the Scientific Community' rejecting the big bang. They refer to 'fudge factors' such as the 'hypothetical' inflation idea, which needs a cosmic density 20 times larger than that required for the big bang to make the light elements.
Coming right back to Earth, Mannatech's Research Scientists are continuing to work in the area of glycobiology, one of the last frontiers of science to be conquered and are at the cutting-edge of a large number of discoveries and therapies. Science has already proven our bodies need Glyconutrients for optimal health.
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
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