That’s a misleading way of putting it (as if the light gets some distance and then stops); that simply isn’t what standard physics and cosmology describe.
What standard physics and cosmology (a galaxy recedes at v = HD) descibe is that at that distance D = c/H, a photon encounters space expanding faster than c.
It doesn’t “stop” in standard physics. It gets trapped in a region of space expanding faster than it can travel.
Which is somewhat absurd, if you consider that between your left eye and your right eye is space expanding faster than c, from the perspective of someone c/H to the left and the right.
that something like 99% of people who actually know a lot about physics and cosmology accept “the 13.8 billion number”.
Maybe in 1995.
The original post deflates every piece of evidence for a Big Bang.
between your left eye and your right eye is space expanding faster than c, from the perspective of someone c/H to the left and the right.
No, space in the vicinity of your eyes is (so to speak) held together by gravity and will not be expanding at the Hubble rate.
Maybe in 1995.
You may perhaps be failing to distinguish between when you decided that standard cosmology is all wrong (which may for all I know be 1995) and when everyone else did (which they haven’t).
The original post deflates every piece of evidence for a Big Bang.
What standard physics and cosmology (a galaxy recedes at v = HD) descibe is that at that distance D = c/H, a photon encounters space expanding faster than c.
It doesn’t “stop” in standard physics. It gets trapped in a region of space expanding faster than it can travel.
Which is somewhat absurd, if you consider that between your left eye and your right eye is space expanding faster than c, from the perspective of someone c/H to the left and the right.
Maybe in 1995.
The original post deflates every piece of evidence for a Big Bang.
No, space in the vicinity of your eyes is (so to speak) held together by gravity and will not be expanding at the Hubble rate.
You may perhaps be failing to distinguish between when you decided that standard cosmology is all wrong (which may for all I know be 1995) and when everyone else did (which they haven’t).
In your dreams.