2010
DOI: 10.1017/s1473550410000352
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The origin of life from primordial planets

Abstract: Abstract:The origin of life and the origin of the universe are among the most important problems of science and they might be inextricably linked. Hydro-gravitational-dynamics (HGD) cosmology predicts hydrogen-helium gas planets in clumps as the dark matter of galaxies, with millions of planets per star. This unexpected prediction is supported by quasar microlensing of a galaxy and a flood of new data from space telescopes. Supernovae from stellar over-accretion of planets produce the chemicals (C, N, O, P etc… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 45 publications
(77 reference statements)
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“…The theory that Hoyle and one of the authors advanced through the 1970's and 1980's was that the origin of life was a unique cosmological (or galactic) event, and that its panspermic transfer as freeze-dried microorganisms via comets is inevitable [11,15]. The prediction of the The startling correspondence between our predicted thermal behaviour of evaporated dust and the bacterial grain model is shown in Figure 1b.…”
Section: Spectroscopic Evidencementioning
confidence: 60%
“…The theory that Hoyle and one of the authors advanced through the 1970's and 1980's was that the origin of life was a unique cosmological (or galactic) event, and that its panspermic transfer as freeze-dried microorganisms via comets is inevitable [11,15]. The prediction of the The startling correspondence between our predicted thermal behaviour of evaporated dust and the bacterial grain model is shown in Figure 1b.…”
Section: Spectroscopic Evidencementioning
confidence: 60%
“…In one such model (HGD cosmology of Gibson and Schild), still within the paradigm of Big Bang cosmology, life emerges less than a million years after the Big Bang when most of the matter (including life-giving chemical elements) existed within the warm interiors of planetary mass condensations. At later cosmological epochs biology will remain hardfrozen in primordial planets and continue to spread as an everexpanding reservoir of life [8]. In quasi-steady state and oscillating cosmological models, which involve an open timescale, the superastronomical information content life is an ever present property of the Universe [9][10][11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The implication of the model fits of the type shown in Figure 1 is that some 20% or more of the mass of carbon in interstellar space is tied up in the form of particles that are spectroscopically indistinguishable from freeze-dried bacteria, viruses and their degradation products [12][13][14].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The improbabilities associated with the origin of life are then safely tucked away in an early stage in the evolution of the Big-Bang Universe [13] or, life was ever present in a universe with an open timescale [14]. In a lecture entitled "The relation of biology to astronomy" delivered at an out-of-town meeting of the Royal Astronomical Society in Cardiff on 15 th April 1980, Fred Hoyle concluded thus: "Microbiology may be said to have had its beginnings in the nineteen-forties.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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