Explore
astronomy
Back to Topics
Page 3 of 8 (89 Articles)
More problems for the ‘Oort comet cloud’
Since it cannot be detected, the Oort cloud is not a scientific concept.
by Danny Faulkner
Kuiper Belt Objects: solution to short-period comets?
by Robert Newton
Venus: Cauldron of fire
The beautiful morning and evening star holds a fiery secret underneath its cloudy veil—a world so hot that lead will melt at its surface.
by Jonathan Sarfati
Evidence of a watery origin for the solar system
We hope you enjoy this sneak preview of an article from the soon-to-be-released Creation magazine. Subscribers will be delighted with the printed magazine’s powerful content and brilliant graphics.
by Andrew Rigg
WMAP ‘proof’ of big bang fails normal radiological standards
COBE and WMAP satellite maps of cosmic microwave background fluctuations allegedly prove the big bang. But a radiology expert shows they are unreliable, miserably failing radiology standards.
by John Hartnett
Is the faint young sun paradox solved?
The earth would have been a ‘snowball’ if an evolutionary origin of the solar system was true.
by Michael J Oard
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC): will a black hole swallow us?
Media hype had some people thinking the world would end. CMI’s Dr Russell Humphreys, formerly a physicist with the prestigious Sandia National Laboratories, makes an informed comment.
by Russell Humphreys
Total eclipse of the brain
Don’t fall for flat-earth brainwashing
by Robert Carter
What you need to know about the James Webb Space Telescope
Will it really see the most distant galaxies? Do the quoted distances prove they are billions of years old?
by Joshua Howells and Mark Harwood
A lesson from Pluto
Going, going, gone! Lessons from a disappearing planet.
by Tas Walker
Planetary system formation: exposing naturalistic storytelling
The naturalistic model to explain how stars formed shows fatal flaws when compared with the known laws of physics.
by John G. Hartnett
Vintage Journal: A galactocentric cosmology
What would we expect the universe to look like if we were near the centre?
by John Hartnett