Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Towards a More Well-Founded Cosmology

Version 1 : Received: 15 March 2017 / Approved: 16 March 2017 / Online: 16 March 2017 (09:31:27 CET)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Traunmüller, H. Towards a More Well-Founded Cosmology. Zeitschrift für Naturforschung A 2018, 73, 1005–1023, doi:10.1515/zna-2018-0217. Traunmüller, H. Towards a More Well-Founded Cosmology. Zeitschrift für Naturforschung A 2018, 73, 1005–1023, doi:10.1515/zna-2018-0217.

Abstract

First, this paper broaches the epistemological status of scientific tenets and approaches: phenomenological (descriptive only), well-founded (solid first principles, conducive to deep understanding), provisional (can be falsified if universal and verified if existential), and imaginary (fictitious entities or processes, conducive to empirically unsupported beliefs). The ΛCDM “concordance model” involves such beliefs: the emanation of the universe out of a non-physical stage, cosmic inflation (invented ad hoc), Λ (fictitious energy), and exotic dark matter. Big Bang cosmology further faces conceptual and pragmatic problems in delimiting what expands from what does not. The problems dissolve after untying inertia from space. The cosmology that emerges appears immediately compatible with the considered observations and the ‘perfect cosmological principle’. Waves and field perturbations that propagate at c expand exponentially with distance (a gravitational effect). The cosmic web of galaxies does not. Potential -Φ varies as H/(cz) instead of 1/r. Inertial forces arise from the gravitational action of the rest of the universe. Due to dilatation, they are reduced disproportionately at low accelerations. A cut-off value a0 = 0.168 cH is deduced. This explains the successful description of galaxy rotation curves by MoND. A fully elaborated physical theory is still pending. Wider implications are briefly discussed.

Keywords

foundations of science; cosmology: observations; cosmology: theory; galaxies: kinematics and dynamics; inertia; MoND

Subject

Physical Sciences, Astronomy and Astrophysics

Comments (0)

We encourage comments and feedback from a broad range of readers. See criteria for comments and our Diversity statement.

Leave a public comment
Send a private comment to the author(s)
* All users must log in before leaving a comment
Views 0
Downloads 0
Comments 0
Metrics 0


×
Alerts
Notify me about updates to this article or when a peer-reviewed version is published.
We use cookies on our website to ensure you get the best experience.
Read more about our cookies here.