Accelerated Cosmic Expansion, Not Grey Dust

Accelerated Cosmic Expansion, Not Grey Dust

TNRTB Archive – Retained for reference information

X-ray studies of a distant quasar provide more evidence for the immensely fine-tuned space-energy density that causes the expansion rate of the universe to increase. The discovery of the space-energy density (also known as dark energy) in the late 1990s rested on observations of Type Ia supernovae. The dark energy provided the simplest explanation of the dimness of these supernovae (which function as standard candles) as their redshifts increased. One alternative model posited the existence of a specific kind of dust—called “grey dust”—that accounted for the dimness-redshift relation. However, x-ray studies of a distant quasar constrain the amount of this dust to be less than one-tenth the amount required to explain the supernova data without dark energy. Given that dark energy ranks as the single most fine-tuned characteristic of the universe, these results further support RTB’s cosmic creation model, which asserts that a supernatural Creator designed the universe specifically to support life.