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by DiogenesKynikos
1040 days ago
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If you average a bunch of different types of galaxies, you do not get a blackbody. Do you know what does give you a blackbody? An optically thick medium with a uniform temperature, which is what the CMB "last scattering surface" is. I just have one question for you: do you think that physicists are all a bunch of dunces? You're doing extremely simple questions. Do you think that physicists haven't worked out the basics of the theory? Again, instead of raising extremely simple objections, your time would be better spent understanding the theory first. >> For example, conservation of energy does not hold in General Relativity. > Then something is wrong. Energy conservation only holds locally, when space is nearly flat. The true conservation law in General Relativity is more complicated (energy-momentum conservation). |
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Black body averages emission of trillions of trillions of atoms. Why it will not work for emission of trillions of trillions of galaxies? Can you prove that?
> Energy conservation only holds locally, when space is nearly flat.
Space is flat in all directions.