Milky Way. From this and other evidence, astronomers infer that Andromeda has already collided with at least one other galaxy.
We should expect that galaxies are scattered randomly throughout the universe. Instead they are often found in “clusters,” which are in turn parts of extremely large structures called “super-clusters.” If Big Bang really occurred there would be a far more even distribution of matter. And if galaxies, though improbable, did form, they would be moving away from each other, not colliding. Also, if the universe has been expanding for billions of years, why do we not observe a large ‘hole’ where the centre of the blast was?
We can turn matter into energy in exceptional circumstances such as producing a critical mass of a radioactive substance, which has an unstable nucleus, but we can’t create matter. It would take more intelligence and greater technology that we possess to make matter. It would take the intelligence and the capabilities of a “God” to provide the necessary energy, convert it into matter, overrule the law of entropy and organise it into galaxies.
The “quantum” theory would propose that vacuum became particle and anti-particle pairs and the energy needed for the vast amount of matter in the universe was “borrowed” from gravitational energy. This just seems a circular proposition, robbing peter to pay peter. In making an awful lot of matter an equal amount of anti-matter would be made. Where does it all go?
So where does all the matter come from? The theory does not answer this question or fit the condition that the matter in our universe has come from somewhere. It is easier and more rational to believe that God put it there, and at the same
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