Perceiving the cosmos requires
presuppositions."We and the
cosmos are one. The cosmos is a vast
body, of which we are still parts.
The sun is a great heart whose
tremors run through our smallest
veins. The moon is a great gleaming
nerve-centre from which we quiver
forever. Who knows the power that."
--- D. H. Lawrence
"Gravitational lensing" theory is
currently in fashion among
astronomers. They use it to explain
the arcs of glowing material
surrounding some galaxies. They also
use it in conjunction with other
theories to help deal with puzzling
observations. One of those puzzles
involves the so-called expanding
Universe.
According to a recent
press release, scientists
have, for the first time, combined
data from the Hubble Space Telescope
with ground-based measurements to
map the effect that gravity might
have on light as it travels through
space. Recent calculations seem to
show that the Universe is expanding
faster than it should, perhaps
because there is a greater amount of
mass than previously thought. In
particular, the research group
looked at previously catalogued
redshift information from 194,000
galaxies, plugging the figures into
a statistical model they designed.
Minute differences in how some
galaxies are shaped point to what
they claim is a "warping of
spacetime" due to unseen
conglomerations of matter. It is
that space-bending effect that holds
their hypothesis together. The
intense gravity generated by the
concentrations of invisible (or
"dark") matter is said to cause
light rays from remote objects to
bend as if seen through a lens.
However, it is a "weak gravitational
lensing" effect, so the slight
variations can only be identified
statistically.
In the image at the top of the
page, galactic redshift data was
plotted against the altered shapes
of distant galaxies due to weak
gravitational lensing. Based on
complex software programs, the
gravity model produced galaxy
cluster plots that indicate the
presence of enough dark matter to
account for the accelerated
expansion of the Universe.
Conventional “gravity-only”
astronomy sees the bending of light
by gravitational "lensing." What is
more important is that the entire
premise depends on a single
assumption, that higher redshift
equals greater distance. Halton Arp
has made several assertions that
counter that assumption, however.
As Arp's
galactic compendium grew,
he noticed that there was something
wrong with conventional
time-speed-distance calculations—he
found objects with higher redshift
values in front of objects with
lower redshift. Surely, such a
conundrum should have immediately
called into question the very nature
of that "cosmological constant."
It is often written in the
popular press that dark matter makes
up “25% of the Universe” or that
dark energy makes up “75% of the
rest of the Universe.” To anyone
familiar with plasma physics, it is
well known that plasma makes up
99.99% of the Universe. It is a
fascinating convergence that the
amount of gravitational mass
invented to save conventional
theories is the same as the ionized
plasma that is overlooked.
Stephen Smith
A video documentary that could
change everything you thought you
knew about ancient times and
symbols. In this second episode of
Symbols of an Alien Sky, David
Talbott takes the viewer on an
odyssey across the surface of Mars.
Exploring feature after feature of
the planet, he finds that only
electric arcs could produce the
observed patterns. The high
resolution images reveal massive
channels and gouges, great mounds,
and crater chains, none finding an
explanation in traditional geology,
but all matching the scars from
electric discharge experiments in
the laboratory. (Approximately 85
minutes)