I would beg your indulgence for you to consider what I have as lingering concerns. I will not try and cite them in any way because they are just what are on my mind. Think of them as a mostly regurgitation of PC/EU talking points so far as I have been able to determing. I hope that your grasp of the subject may put these concerns to bed if possible Reality Check.
I'm not RC, but I hope you don't mind me jumping in with some quick responses.
1. Theories can be made to fit any curves you want to a certain extent. Add more layers and you get a better ability for your set of equations to fit whatever curve you may have. The history of BB cosmology on this count does not seem very good to me.
It might be helpful if we take a look at this in some detail, and compare it with some (physics) theories which you consider to not suffer from this perceived problem.
First, however, please recognise that concordance LCDM models ("BB cosmology") are built using more than one theory in physics; at their core are the two most successful theories in physics, General Relativity (GR) and the Standard Model (of particle physics).
I can understand new discoveries, but when you have a good theory the predictions come first and the discoveries second. From what I have read, this does not seem to be the course for BB. Inflation came only after the shock of the discovery of flatness and spatial homogeneity not working well together.
Let's explore this further; I think you'll find that contemporary cosmology (and astrophysics in general) is no different from any branch of physics in this regard.
Plus, I am sorry, but I have a real hard time believing in a theory that has a field existing only around the beginning of time and with particles named Inflatons. It seems very ad hoc to me. Add in Dark matter and energy having most of the universe being non-normal matter and it seems like to me you have some seriously huge fudge factors.
This reveals, to me, a huge misunderstanding of what modern cosmology (and astrophysics, and even physics) is about.
Try this: a theory, in these fields of science, is good (in some important way) if it:
a) is internally consistent
b) is consistent with other, well-established, theories, where their respective domains of applicability overlap
c) is consistent with all relevant observations and experimental results.
So, may I ask you what your criteria are, for judging a theory?
(BTW, "theory" and "model" are, to some extent, similar, or overlap, etc)
Dark matter I have read has some serious curve fitting issues as well (problems fitting radial velocity versus radius, plus, how many models of Dark matter are there? Which one is it already?). How did those halos get there around the galaxies in the first place? If they are so massive collectively, why don't they just coelesce into the center of galaxies instead of forming these monstrous sized halos? Plus, no one has yet directly detected dark matter. Is that something I should feel confident about when in comparison if you look at the predictions for other types of matter such as with Dirac and antimatter or the rest of the zoo of particles in the Standard model they all were found in pretty much short order time. It makes me very suspicious that dark X is just dark thinking.
I started a thread, here in JREF, on the question of dark matter (strictly speaking, cold, non-baryonic dark matter). You may find it informative (I'll dig up a link to it later).
2. Comets do not act right according to astronomers. They are not made of water and yet are supposed to give off copious amounts of it because spectrographic techniques reveal that OH radicals are in the coma of comets. That does not make sense. Deep impact hit comet Tempel 1 and exploded far too much given what astronomers predicted beforehand. It even had an initial spark as predicted in one of Wallace Thornhill's 17 predictions came true while none of the astronomers predictions worked out. Comets have been observed to give off X-ray light, how does that make sense when you should just have light from the sun sublimating rocky ice? Which gets to the other point, observations found that comets are not made of ice on the surface but look like asteroids.
This is one topic that really, really, really presses my hot buttons.
I think there's also a thread, here in this section of JREF, on it.
If I may, I'd like to ask you to put your critical thinking cap on, and read these so-called predictions again.
One aspect: a key part of science is "independently verifiable"; take a look at everything Thornhill has written, and ask if - even in principle - you could, independently, reproduce those predictions. If not, then how does the "prediction" differ from "word from an Oracle"?
3. Halton Arp, what is the deal? I do not think his cosmological ideas are probably correct but he does seem to have been unfairly abused. Why is it that galactic red-shifts absolutely have to be cosmological? Is there no other mechanism to explain it that is maybe less cosmos shaking?
Consider this: redshifts come from electrons "jumping" from one energy level to another, mostly in atoms (or ions). If there is an intrinsic redshift (for a galaxy), then the atoms in that galaxy must be different from the ones here on Earth; if you bring a bunch of them here, and put them into a spectrograph, they'd be unlike anything we've ever seen. Does the term 'ad hoc' apply, do you think?
Also, redshifts of galaxies do have a significant non-cosmological component (to say otherwise is to show extraordinary ignorance of astronomy).
Arp's main claim, however, is that quasars are local; this is easily shown to be, um, inconsistent with all relevant observations (later).
But perhaps the most extraordinary part of this claim is that it should be part of "plasma cosmology"! Are 'intrinsic redshifts' something you can derive from any "plasma cosmology theory"?!?
4. Black Holes do not exist. Sorry, you have more of a chance convincing me that the above three set of points are true then that black holes exist. Yes, there are things that have energy-densities that astronomers say they do. I do not doubt that. What I seriously doubt is that Black Holes are a prediction of GR. In fact, I know they are not. I have proven it using GR.
Start a new thread!
This is, sorry to be so blunt, an extraordinary, astonishing, amazing claim!
If true, you are surely destined for a free round trip to Stockholm!!
Write up your proof, submit it to a relevant, leading physics journal, and await the fame that you would truly deserve.
(to be continued)