Into the Impossible With Brian Keating - Did the Big Bang Happen? Brian Keating on The Morning Wire (#260)
Episode Date: September 21, 2022Newly released photos from the James Webb Space Telescope have allowed scientists to view farther into space, and farther into the past, than ever before. The images emerging are raising questions abo...ut the origins of our universe. One viral article from independent scientist Eric Lerner made the rounds on social media in recent weeks with its provocative claim that the Big Bang never happened. We speak to UC San Diego Professor of Cosmology Brian Keating about what the images show, and what we can and can’t conclude from them. Get the facts first on Morning Wire. Connect with Brian Keating: 🏄♂️ Twitter: https://twitter.com/DrBrianKeating 📸 Instagram: https://instagram.com/DrBrianKeating 🔔 Subscribe https://www.youtube.com/DrBrianKeating?sub_confirmation=1 📝 Join my mailing list; just click here http://briankeating.com/list ✍️ Detailed Blog posts here: https://briankeating.com/blog.php 🎙️ Listen on audio-only platforms: https://briankeating.com/podcast Join Shortform through my link Shortform.com/impossible and you’ll receive 5 days of unlimited access and an additional 20% discounted annual subscription! Subscribe to the Jordan Harbinger Show for amazing content from Apple’s best podcast of 2018! Can you do me a favor? Please leave a rating and review of my Podcast: 🎧 On Apple devices, click here, scroll down to the ratings and leave a 5 star rating and review The INTO THE IMPOSSIBLE Podcast. 🎙️On Spotify it’s here 🎧 On Audible it’s here Other ways to rate here: https://briankeating.com/podcast Support the podcast on Patreon or become a Member on YouTube Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Newly released photos from the James Webb Space Telescope
have allowed scientists to view farther into space
and farther into the past than ever before.
The image is emerging or raising questions
about what we thought we knew about the early universe.
One viral article from independent scientist and author Eric Lerner
made the rounds on social media in recent weeks
with its provocative claim that the Big Bang never happened.
Lerner claims that the images provide evidence that the Big Bang theory is flawed.
He also leveled accusations at the astronomy community of censorship and refusal to acknowledge contradictory evidence to the widely accepted theory.
In this episode of Morning Wire, we speak to UC San Diego, Professor of Cosmology Brian Keating about what the images show and what we can and can't conclude from them.
I'm Georgia Howe. It's September 18th, and this is your Sunday edition of Morning Wire.
Now, right off the bat, for listeners who are interested,
Learner's article is widely available online,
as well as numerous detailed critiques,
and we were not able to reach him for comments,
but his claims are fairly straightforward,
so I'm going to do my best to sum them up.
He basically says the images of galaxies we're seeing
don't match predictions made by the Big Bang theory,
for a few reasons.
First, he says they're too small.
He cites an optical illusion that we would expect to see,
given the expansion theorized by the Big Bang.
He says, because the light would have left these distant galaxies when they were much closer to us,
they should appear much larger than they do.
The fact that they appear quite small, he says, suggests that they're either extraordinarily small intrinsically,
so as to overcompensate for that optical illusion, which he says would make them implausibly small,
or the Big Bang prediction itself is wrong.
He also says these galaxies appear.
too mature to have formed just four to 500 million years after the Big Bang.
He says the fact that the galaxies are tidy and round rather than chaotic suggests that they're
older than four to 500 million years, which again, he says, suggests that they predate the
supposed birth of the universe. He says there are also way too many ancient galaxies in the images
and that given the lifespan of stars, this again doesn't match up with the presumed timeline of the
Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago.
Now, Professor Keating, is there, in fact, a panic in the astronomy community about these
photos? What can we make of learners' claims?
I think it's worth taking a step back and explaining what is the Big Bang theory, and it's
as close to a scientific fact as one can achieve in an observational study that only has one
experimental, if you will, element to test. In other words, when you do experiments in chemistry,
there's, well, there's many different types of chemicals, or maybe remember from a high school
biology, you might do a dissect a worm or something like that. But how do you do an experiment or
make an observation in a science that is predicated on the very notion that objects that we are
able to encounter are physically completely remote from us? We can never touch or do it a real
experiment and say change a temperature of a star or in fact change the composition of a galaxy.
So we are even in a worse situation because we only have one universe. You know, there's many
types of worms, but there's only one universe. So when we talk about the universe, it's very
challenging to make an observation because you're relying on light or in very rare cases some
exotic particles to come to Earth and then we can study those particles. Now, what was known for almost
100 years now is that the universe is large. It wasn't actually appreciated that the universe,
what we now call the universe, extended beyond our solar system until about 150 years ago.
Once the observations started to become more and more precise, there began a revolution
and our understanding of what the cosmos is structured like. And in fact, it was inescapable,
according to all scientists, since the early 1920s and 30s,
that the universe was not only large, but it was dynamic, it was changing.
The galaxies that we see with a literal handful, we can see about 100 billion galaxies
in what's called the observable universe, every single one of those galaxies, Georgia,
except for about a dozen, are actually moving away from us.
They exhibit what's called a red shift.
Now, if every galaxy is moving away from us, we would have to have one of two different conclusions.
Either we're the center of the universe and everything is moving away from us for some reason.
Maybe we didn't apply cosmic deodorant or something.
Or the universe is dynamic and expanding.
What Mr. Lerner is claiming is that those claims, which we've known about for 100 years and have matched all observations,
are incorrect, that that is wrong.
And in fact, luckily, from his perspective, he has a theory that explains every single observation
better than he claims the Big Bang,
except he has no way to account
for the seeming expansion of space and time,
so he just denies it.
And for the last 30 years,
since he first published a book
by the same, almost the exact same title
as this recent article,
The Big Bang Never Happened.
He has been writing about this since 1991, I believe.
And in that time,
every time some new observation comes out,
this claim resurfaces.
So, needless to say,
astronomers are quite miffed at him.
But I think it's fun and fair to criticize the theory.
Nothing is sacrosanct.
And so we can get into both the errors in his model of the universe,
but also some of the support for the standard Big Bang theory.
Now, imagine, Georgia, you don't have a telescope.
So you look up, there's only one galaxy external to the Milky Way's local environment
that the human eye can see.
So if your model is that the universe is filled with galaxies,
your eyes will betray that fact.
they will show you that there's only one galaxy
and that's called the Andromeda Galaxy.
It's the only and most distant object
the human eye can see
on a very clear night
from a dark location.
Now, if you then attach your eye to a telescope,
you can see hundreds or thousands of galaxies.
And then if you attach your eye
to the Hubble Space Telescope
or your brain to the Hubble Space Telescope,
you see a vast tapestry of galaxies,
almost like their wallpaper on the wall.
And then finally, if you go
and build a James Webb space tall scope,
which is 10 times more powerful than Hubble,
you'll see even more galaxies.
So the fact that we see more and more galaxies
is, in fact, not proof at all
that the Big Bang didn't happen.
It's proof of the limitations
that your previous technology presented to you.
Now, what do you make of learners' claim
that the galaxies seen in the James Webb
appear too old and too well established
to be the age they're purported to be?
He says they should not be so well-futable.
formed at 4 to 500 million years old.
And therefore, they must predate the hypothesized timeline for the Big Bang.
How would you respond to that claim?
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So the process of galactic evolution is actually a totally separate and distinct field,
as distinct and separate as the physiology of ant eaters is from the study of DNA.
And so he's trying to predicate the invalidation, if you will, of the theory of evolution
or of the DNA origin of genetic information.
And he's trying to use a specific example,
which has large uncertainties,
which he never quotes, by the way.
So a good scientist should always quote his or her
lack of knowledge and lack of confidence in their own model.
So basically what you're saying is
we don't actually know how long it takes for galaxies to form,
so it's not a valid benchmark to measure time by?
Yes. In fact, it's actually true that we do not see galaxies
beyond a certain age of the universe.
And we push back the age at which galaxies
can start to form
with each successive iteration of technology
and the James Webb Space Telescope is no different.
But he does make the point, again,
that refutes his own claims.
He says there should be a time
in which, in the Big Bang model,
there are no galaxies.
And in fact, that's my area of study.
That's called the cosmic microwave background
or the cosmic dark ages.
And in fact, we do not see any galaxies at that point.
So what does Mr. Lerner do?
he dismisses the existence of the cosmic microwave background,
which is a very tool that allowed cosmology to become a precision science
when it was discovered in 1965.
And he says that's an artifact of our own galaxy.
So he doesn't really even believe that the most precisely measured,
the most ancient light in the universe, that it actually exists.
And it is kind of a shame that the media always pick up on his ideas
and give them credibility as if astronomers are truly, as he,
said in crisis and panic. So it all has sort of left a distaste in many astronomers, and some
have been much less kind than I have in taking his credibility at face value. So are there currently
any observations from the new James Webb Space Telescope that are at odds with predictions
made by the Big Bang theory? Again, the James Webb Space Telescope is primarily designed
to do observations of ancient stars, of ancient galaxies.
It's really a stretch to say that it can comment on the existence of the Big Bang or not
any more so than the observation or assessment of a single individual can cast doubt on the theory of evolution
or that the earth, you know, in one part of its surface appears flat.
Therefore, it can cast doubt on the existence of a spherical Earth.
The web telescope can do a great many things.
one of them is to help refine our understanding of how the universe has evolved,
but it does not have the capabilities to speak about the moment of creation or even the age of the universe, if you will.
That's not within its purview.
That doesn't mean that you can't attempt to do it.
There are things that you can attempt to do, but you always have to classify your limitations,
and that's something that Mr. Lerner stubbornly seems to refuse to do.
Now, if you could build a telescope that's capable of viewing 13.8 billion years into the past,
what would you expect to see?
Well, we do have a telescope, Georgia.
We have many telescopes that have seen back
not only to millions or billions of years back in time.
We've seen, so the universe is believed to be 13.8 billion years old.
We have been able to see, so that, let's call today,
13.8 billion years after the Big Bang.
We can see back to 370,000 years after the Big Bang,
not millions, not billions, but thousands,
Already, today, right now, my telescopes, my colleagues' telescopes, we are taking pictures of the
infant universe. That's truly when the universe was about a half a day old out of a 50-year-old
lifespan. So we're already seeing the true baby pictures. And the goal of science right now,
in my scientific field of study, I should say, is to see, can we push that back almost to time
equals zero? Now, for philosophical reasons, it may never be possible to get to time equals to zero.
If you think about it, imagine how do you characterize time when time comes into existence?
So there are theories that suggest the universe is as much older than 13.8 billion years,
but they also feature a big bang.
In other words, there was an earlier universe that collapsed and compounded what's called a big crunch.
And that type of model can be ruled out, not proven.
That's what we do in science.
We're trying to rule out alternatives.
And by doing so and ruling out as much as possible,
what we're left with is a kernel of what we think is approximation to truth.
You'll never get actual proof, like in a mathematical sense,
that one plus one equals two.
But you'll get as close to it as you can in the physical sciences.
And what we're doing, we're already doing way beyond what Mr. Lerner
and his type are claiming is impossible.
We're already taking the infant baby pictures of the universe
when it looked nothing like the universe of even the Webb Telescope.
There were no stars, no galaxies.
It was just a massive pool of protons and neutrons and electrons and photons, very different
from the universe that we inhabit today and certainly different from the universe that the
Webb Telescope has shown.
That's why it has no bearing these data and these claims on the existence of the Big Bang
and the infant universe itself.
The one thing it shows that the universe is dynamic and changing, which Mr. Lerner largely
is rejecting.
Professor Keating, thanks so much for coming on today.
Yes, it's been a pleasure, Georgia. Thanks again.
That was Brian Keating, Professor of Cosmology at the University of California, San Diego.
And this has been a Sunday edition of Morning Wire.
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