Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Like looking in a mirror

When we see the distant universe accelerating away, it is like looking in a mirror. What we see there is also happening here.

But this distant image is so foreign to us we don't recognize it. So to make sense of it, we have constructed a theoretical world that doesn't exist. We say that dark matter, which we cannot see, must be causing this acceleration through some dark energy, which we cannot measure.

As I have chronicled in this blog, I think I have another explanation for the accelerating expansion of space. Applying my theory, it became more clear to me today how this phenomenon is manifest in our world.

Based on the results of my experiment this month, it is appears that gravity on Earth diminishes from day to night. It dawned on me this morning that by a similar experiment, it should become apparent that the Earth is losing its gravity. And if my theory is correct, all the planets, moons, asteroids and other stable masses in our solar system are losing their gravity.

This is due to the accelerating expansion of space. As I proposed in my first articles on this subject, the Big Bang is pushing matter such as planets, stars and galaxies against the fabric of space. This matter is stretching space so thin that the matter meets less resistance and therefore accelerates.

That resistance is manifest in weight. The less resistance, the less weight or gravity.

If that is true in the distant universe, then it should be true in the local universe. In other words, space is stretching such that gravity is diminishing everywhere.

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