Terry,

Interesting. All elements derive from the solar furnace; so, if stars are spewing Hy, you might have found the missing matter. You could estimate the rate of Hy generation and, based on the known age of the universe, determine if sufficient Hy would predict a closed universe.


Yes. Mills goes this far - to equate (at least a decent percentage) of "dark matter" with the hydrino.

Most of he rest of the dark-matter is to found in the mass of the neutrino; with perhaps other exotic particles contributing, and also dense 'accumulations' thrown in for good measure (mini-black holes). This particular universe (not Mills version but a composite viewpoint) is not exactly "closed" in the sense of an inevitable universal collapse, but is so near to perfect balance that it "pulsates" in areas which correspond to "local groups" of galaxies (each being of several thousand "Milky Way" equivalents). These local groups recycle enough of each others shed detritus, such that each go successively in and out of periodic balance over 100 billion year cycles.

Going further, it could be that there is not, nor ever was a big-bang "singularity" but instead there are a succession of "little bangs" of local groups of galaxies - and the CMB (formerly, the best evidence for a singularity) represents - not the relic of a single big-bang, but the spatial limit of 3-space, such that all photon radiation is essentially "reflected" at that limit (the bounding curvature).

Mind-boggling....

Jones

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