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19 years 3 weeks ago #14438
by cosmicsurfer
A picture tells a thousand words. Yet we cannot step back far enough to see what is really going on. It might be that the entire viewplane that we see is part of a huge arm of a superuniverse. But as we look at the Hubble picture of the furthest galaxy, we only see the light traveling through a medium of space at a constant speed (Is light constant speed, or does light cones TILT and FTL beyound the horizon, OR does light slow down?)for 13 billion years that shows a balanced view of many galactic clusters. Now, if the universe has rotation which I believe that it does [because at all scales you find rotation due to positive and negative reverse spin from 4d time +- interactions] then a field of resonant energy would envelope the entire universe. Our universe is not infinite in size or dimension, but most likely it always existed as a homogenous structure of a greater multi-dimensional universe.
John
Replied by cosmicsurfer on topic Reply from John Rickey
A picture tells a thousand words. Yet we cannot step back far enough to see what is really going on. It might be that the entire viewplane that we see is part of a huge arm of a superuniverse. But as we look at the Hubble picture of the furthest galaxy, we only see the light traveling through a medium of space at a constant speed (Is light constant speed, or does light cones TILT and FTL beyound the horizon, OR does light slow down?)for 13 billion years that shows a balanced view of many galactic clusters. Now, if the universe has rotation which I believe that it does [because at all scales you find rotation due to positive and negative reverse spin from 4d time +- interactions] then a field of resonant energy would envelope the entire universe. Our universe is not infinite in size or dimension, but most likely it always existed as a homogenous structure of a greater multi-dimensional universe.
John
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19 years 3 weeks ago #12828
by cosmicsurfer
Replied by cosmicsurfer on topic Reply from John Rickey
Sorry for the double posts. Edit function would save both edited version and old version late last night...maybe moderator could please consolidate the previous messages for me.
In reviewing the posted research, I found the notion of curvature of light fields and the increase in FTL speed of light due to curvature past horizon very interesting and it made me think about how that could possibly take place. Could it be possible that light is accelerated over time as it races continously around a curved universal field that itself could be static with scalar resonances that could possibly accelerate or at times decelerate field as a locked insync with gravity relativity; and, could this scalar field that controls light speed at the same time be anchored to the greater relativity of a universe in extreme motion. From small to large scales it appears that at each step there is guaged relativities in motion. Each a dimensional world unto itself that appears static when under the influence of gravity; and just we cannot see beyond this dimension we might very well be just a small corner of a much larger circulation that appears static, but is in fact in extreme motion at larger scales.
Boundary bubble zones around galactic rotational gravity fields could create shielding against incoming radiation effects by forming electrostatic barriers. Gravity would increase on mass as you approach from inside of barrier, and the forces would repulse mass on the outside of barrier. Light would be repulsed around these fields which could create all sorts of image splitting and deformation of the actual structure image of distant objects. No doubt there is curvature and that alone would have an effect upon the light image and the field interactions could possibly have an effect upon the speed of light.
John
In reviewing the posted research, I found the notion of curvature of light fields and the increase in FTL speed of light due to curvature past horizon very interesting and it made me think about how that could possibly take place. Could it be possible that light is accelerated over time as it races continously around a curved universal field that itself could be static with scalar resonances that could possibly accelerate or at times decelerate field as a locked insync with gravity relativity; and, could this scalar field that controls light speed at the same time be anchored to the greater relativity of a universe in extreme motion. From small to large scales it appears that at each step there is guaged relativities in motion. Each a dimensional world unto itself that appears static when under the influence of gravity; and just we cannot see beyond this dimension we might very well be just a small corner of a much larger circulation that appears static, but is in fact in extreme motion at larger scales.
Boundary bubble zones around galactic rotational gravity fields could create shielding against incoming radiation effects by forming electrostatic barriers. Gravity would increase on mass as you approach from inside of barrier, and the forces would repulse mass on the outside of barrier. Light would be repulsed around these fields which could create all sorts of image splitting and deformation of the actual structure image of distant objects. No doubt there is curvature and that alone would have an effect upon the light image and the field interactions could possibly have an effect upon the speed of light.
John
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19 years 3 weeks ago #14439
by Michiel
Replied by Michiel on topic Reply from Michiel
Cosmicsurfer, those long url's render the whole page unreadable. The link doesn't even work.
Why don't you use this option to give your link a [short] description.
Scrolling from left to right is lethal for someone with dyslexia.
Why don't you use this option to give your link a [short] description.
Scrolling from left to right is lethal for someone with dyslexia.
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19 years 3 weeks ago #12798
by PhilJ
Replied by PhilJ on topic Reply from Philip Janes
Cosmicsurfer: Do you know how to post a hyperlink without showing the entire URL? One of your links posted today is forcing my page (on this public library's monitor) to scroll. I'll try to make it easy:
(1) Select the text that you want to link.
(2) Click the hyperlink icon.
(3) Change {url}text{/url} to read, {url=""}text{/url} (square brackets replaced by "{ }" to avoid confusing the editor software.)
(4) Cut or Copy the URL and paste it between the quotes. QED
(1) Select the text that you want to link.
(2) Click the hyperlink icon.
(3) Change {url}text{/url} to read, {url=""}text{/url} (square brackets replaced by "{ }" to avoid confusing the editor software.)
(4) Cut or Copy the URL and paste it between the quotes. QED
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19 years 3 weeks ago #12829
by cosmicsurfer
Replied by cosmicsurfer on topic Reply from John Rickey
Hi Michiel, some of the research papers are PDF files so the only way I can copy from them is to utilize the HTML conversion available at Yahoo, or the cached version. Next time, I will go to the original PDF file after making my copies and get the direct address which then would work better. Thanks for pointing out the problem. I have had some weird conversions lately too, like quote marks turning into an "i" followed by "+-," which was kind a cool since it made me think of an infinite plus and minus range. Those cached links would most likely have to be "ctrl c'd" then pasted into the address line to work. How can we size our content so it fits page without scrolling? Thanks again, john
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19 years 3 weeks ago #12799
by cosmicsurfer
Replied by cosmicsurfer on topic Reply from John Rickey
PhilJ, I will try your method...hope I can get a handle on these link problems. I guess the first link to the Hubble pic was a security problem. Are there certain links that we need to be aware of that may cause problems? I have to go pick up our exchange student from Belgium so I'm outa here. I will try to be more careful on this link issue.
John
John
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