Abstract
A hypothesis is presented that electromagnetic forces that prevent ions from
following geodesics result in a curvature pressure that is very important in
astrophysics. It may partly explain the solar neutrino deficiency and it may
be the engine that drives astrophysical jets. However, the most important
consequence is that, under general relativity without a cosmological constant,
it leads to a static and stable cosmology. Combining an earlier hypothesis of
a gravitational interaction of photons and particles with curved spacetime, a
static cosmology is developed that predicts a Hubble constant of
H = 60 . 2 km
s− 1 Mpc− 1 and a
microwave background radiation with a temperature of 3 . 0 K. The
background X-ray radiation is explained, and observations of the quasar
luminosity function and the angular distribution of radio sources have a
better fit with this cosmology than they do with standard big-bang models.
Although recent results (Pahre et al . 1996) for the
Tolman surface brightness test favour the standard big-bang cosmology, they
are not completely inconsistent with a static tired-light model. Most
observations that imply the existence of dark matter measure redshift,
interpret them as velocities, and invoke the virial theorem to predict masses
that are much greater than those deduced from luminosities. If, however, most
of these redshifts are due to the gravitational interaction in intervening
clouds, no dark matter is required. Observations of quasar absorption lines, a
microwave background temperature at a redshift of z
= 1 . 9731, type 1a supernovae light curves and the
Butcher–Oemler effect are discussed. The evidence is not strong enough
to completely eliminate a non-evolving cosmology. The result is a static and
stable cosmological model that agrees with most of the current observations.
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献