Optical coherence in astrophysics: The powerful alternative of big bang
Jacques Moret-Bailly

TL;DR
This paper proposes that optical coherence phenomena, such as ISRS, can explain cosmological observations traditionally attributed to the Big Bang, dark matter, and dark energy, offering a simpler alternative grounded in light-matter interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a coherence-based framework that challenges standard cosmological models, explaining redshifts, galaxy distributions, and anomalies without new physics.
Findings
Redshifts caused by ISRS in hydrogen gas affect distance measurements.
Explanations for galaxy distribution voids without dark matter.
Account of Pioneer anomaly via coherent microwave scattering.
Abstract
The coherence of the interaction of light with a collisionless gas (Einstein 1917) founds the theory of gas lasers. It is, for the understanding of universe, a simpler and more powerful tool than the big bang which requires questionable supplements (dark matter, MOND, etc..). The Impulsive Stimulated Raman Scattering (ISRS) redshifts gradually light pulses which cross excited atomic hydrogen H*, so that the redshift is a measure of the column density of H*. Thus, the distance of the hot stars, surrounded by much H*, is exaggerated by the use of Hubble's law. Local exaggerated distances create voids in the maps of galaxies which become spongy. The interpretation of spectra of quasars, the periodicity of galaxy redshifts introduce an experimental "Karlsson's constant" exactly computed by ISRS. The need for dark matter comes from the exaggeration of the distance, therefore the size of…
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