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  • Part I: Scientific Case for Creation
    • Life Sciences
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    • Earth Sciences
    • References and Notes
  • Part II: Fountains of the Great Deep
    • The Hydroplate Theory: An Overview
    • The Origin of Ocean Trenches, Earthquakes, and the Ring of Fire
    • Liquefaction: The Origin of Strata and Layered Fossils
    • The Origin of the Grand Canyon
    • The Origin of Limestone
    • Frozen Mammoths
    • The Origin of Comets
    • The Origin of Asteroids, Meteoroids,and Trans-Neptunian Objects
    • The Origin of Earth's Radioactivity
  • Part III: Frequently Asked Questions
  • Technical Notes
  • Index

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[ Frequently Asked Questions > Why Is the Universe Expanding? > Dark matter, dark energy, and many other scientific problems with the big bang theory are discussed beginning on page 31. ]

Dark matter, dark energy, and many other scientific problems with the big bang theory are discussed beginning on page 31.

Accelerating Expansion. The redshift of distant starlight shows an expansion. Just as a ball thrown upward must slow (decelerate) as it moves away from the Earth, a big bang would have produced only a decelerating expansion, after the 10-32 second inflationary burst ended and the universe was the size of a basketball. But, in 1998 it was discovered that distant galaxies were accelerating away from us. Saying, without any experimental evidence or physical details, that “dark energy” produced this acceleration is simply a reflection of ignorance. [See “Dark Thoughts” on page 33 .]

Stretching, completed during the creation week (not in 10-32 of a second after time began), ended with a universe nearly the size of our present universe—not a universe the size of a basketball. We should not be surprised that we can detect distant accelerations produced during that stretching.

Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). The CMB is often given as evidence for the big bang theory. Actually, the absence of gravitational waves in the CMB, argues against the big bang and is evidence for the sudden creation of matter within a much smaller universe that was stretched out on Day 4. [For details, Figure 227 and pages 460–461.]

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