The effects of turbulence generated in Big Bang nucleosynthesis
Charles Francis

TL;DR
This paper proposes that turbulence generated during Big Bang nucleosynthesis leads to large-scale structure formation, galaxy creation, and influences cosmological parameters, challenging standard models and aligning with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a turbulence-based mechanism for structure formation in the early universe, linking BBN energy release to galaxy formation and cosmological observations.
Findings
Turbulence from BBN causes instability and large-scale structure formation.
Formation of spiral galaxies with flat rotation curves is explained by vortex dynamics.
Predicted CMB flatness and expansion rates align with observations.
Abstract
The continuity equation requires that energy released in nuclear fusion flows away from the point of interaction and is not immediately thermalised into the CMB. It is seen that consequently the bulk of thermo-nuclear energy released in BBN is converted by radiation pressure to kinetic energy of gas motions and generates instability in homogeneous initial conditions. High levels of turbulence follow, triggering the Jeans mechanism and leading to the formation of galaxies and large-scale structure in the order of 10 Myrs. Friedmann cosmology is perturbed, creating a fractal Voronoi matter distribution and providing energy for reionisation. In keeping with observations, general relativity predicts that there is no bound on the size of the structures produced. The true (overall) rate of expansion is substantially below the observed (local) value of Hubble's constant, and is consistent with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Scientific Research and Discoveries · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
