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	Q&A: Cosmology
                        
                    
            Q:
               Instead of saying "..when the universe was half its' size",
               wouldn't it be more accurate to say "..at a time in the very
               distant past.." or some such? Do we really know anything of the
               universe's size or age? We really only know something of that
               portion of the universe which our instruments can see, or detect
               and nothing of what is beyond their reach. From all appearances
               there is every reason to believe that it goes on and on. The
               so-called "Big Bang" is only a theory, far from proven. So, why
               not be more accurate and leave room for other, equally astute
               theories, such as a plasma field created universe?
              
               A:
               Statements such as "we see an object when the universe was half
               its present size" are dependent only on a measurement of the red
               shift of the object (equal to 1 in this case), and the
               assumption that the red shift is due to the expansion of the
               universe. This assumption is on very solid ground, much more so
               than the Big Bang cosmology, the current theory with the most
               going for it, that seeks to explain the expansion and other
               observations, such as the microwave background radiation.
               Statements about the age are more dependent on the model
               universe and are on shakier ground.
               
               
               
               
            
   
        



