THEIR HOMEWORK A Special Chalcedon Position Paper by
Martin G. Selbrede In a surprising turn of events, Dr. Gary North hired Dr. Michael Martin Nieto, theoretical physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, to analyze alleged fatal flaws and defects in geocentric cosmology from the standpoint of an astrophysicist. Dr. North paid Dr. Nieto for the resulting essay, entitled Testing Ideas on Geostationary Satellites, which is incorporated as the bulk of the publication bearing the superscription, Geocentrism: An Astrophysicist's Comments. Dr. Nieto interacted with virtually no relevant geocentric material, although it was not only available to Dr. North, but actually forwarded to him in 1992. Dr. North saw fit to return the most technically-oriented and complete videotaped lecture on geocentricity available at that time, without having ever watched it. The video provided up-to-date technical references in answer to Dr. North's many challenges, but he refused to view it. He could have saved himself the money, and Dr. Nieto the trouble, had he not inflicted such blindness upon himself. The response to Dr. Nieto is contained in that video, and we need merely rehearse it here to refute Dr. Nieto's and Dr. North's papers. The fact that Dr. North held that very video in his hands and yet refused to view it, reflects a tragic breakdown of academic and intellectual integrity on his part. The great irony of Dr. Nieto's essay is his complete reliance on Einstein's General Theory of Relativity. The irony obtains from the fact that general relativity stipulates that any observer can consider himself to be at rest - and that solving Einstein's field equations for his position will properly and satisfactorily describe all phenomena observed from that vantage point. When Drs. North & Nieto assert that if the earth were at rest, geosynchronous satellites would necessarily fall down, they are asserting that general relativity is completely false. Since Dr. Nieto uses 2 of his 7 pages to air alleged experimental proof for general relativity, we observe that a kingdom divided against itself cannot stand, and that Dr. Nieto thereby destroys his own arguments. In fact, Dr. Nieto appears to be completely unaware of the well- documented key doctrines of general relativity, both as presented by Einstein and Mach, and developed subsequently into our own decade. This failure of scholarship (surprising, since the essentials are taught in freshman-level courses in physics) has led Nieto into multiple errors. North and Nieto are searching for the mystical geocentric force that holds up geosynchronous satellites, preventing them from falling to the earth given the geocentric hypothesis that they are not orbiting objects. Where is this force? they ask, for they have searched and found it not. So they appeal to their readers to search as well and see for themselves there is no such force, just as the Pharisees challenged, Search, and look: for out of Galilee ariseth no prophet (John 7:52). Had the Pharisees glanced at Isaiah 9, they could have spared themselves an embarrassing gaffe. Had Dr. Nieto reviewed Einstein first, he could have done likewise. The urge to hide the geocentric force acting on the geosynchronous satellite from his readership resulted in the following error by Nieto. Says he, one sees that there is no explicit mathematical theory as to why the satellite would stay up there if the universe were geocentric. The authors postulate that maybe there is a sphere of matter (no good, they realize, there is no force inside a sphere of matter), or then maybe there is a ring and maybe this could account for it. They speculate. But they do not show. Actually, we did show, but Dr. North didn't watch. Einstein taught that there is a force inside a sphere of matter that is in motion. He wrote plainly to Ernst Mach on June 25, 1913, If one accelerates a heavy shell of matter S. then a mass enclosed by that shell experiences an accelerative force. If one rotates the shell relative to the fixed stars about an axis going through its center, a Coriolis force arises in the interior of the shell, that is, the plane of a Foucault pendulum is dragged around. Geocentrists have never denied the Gaussian proposition that there is no net force inside a stationary shell of matter but the distinguishing feature of geocentricity is the daily rotation of the universe around the earth. How did Nieto and North miss it? By using return mail. The magnitude of the force (usually discussed under the heading of
dragging of inertial frames) is cited in many references. Misner,
Wheeler & Thorne, in their tome Gravitation, pp. 547, quantify the rotational
drag by simple dimensional considerations and propose that
wFoucault must be identical with wstars, or, namely, that the angular
velocity of a Foucault pendulum equals the angular velocity (speed of
rotation) of the stars (i.e., the rest of the universe) - ibid, pg. 548. These
well-respected authors (Kip S. Thorne is Cal Tech's black hole and
general relativity expert; Wheeler & Misner taught at Princeton, Cal Tech
and Oxford) approvingly cite the 1918 work of Thirring (pg.547) in connection
with this force and its computation.
This last circumstance is doubly ironic, since Dr. Nieto's final footnote
begins, There is a gravimagneto effect related to the Earth's rotation,
which amusingly draws upon the work by Thirring cited by [Dr.
John] Byl. Dr. Nieto's faulty understanding of basic relativity theory
could have been remedied by checking the work by Thirring. Hans Thirring
begins by citing Einstein's 1914 paper. Einstein defines K as a
Galilean-Newtonian coordinate system, and K1 as a coordinate system
rotating uniformly relative to K. Since this directly represents the earth
(K1) and the universe (K) in Dr. Nieto's antigeocentric cosmology, I will
substitute these identifications for K and K1 in italics in Einstein's text to
make Einstein's position clear to every reader:
Let the earth be a coordinate system rotating uniformly relative to
the universe. Then centrifugal forces would be in effect for masses at rest
in the universe's coordinate system, while no such forces would be
present for objects at rest with respect to the earth. [The geosynchronous
satellite is precisely such an object, at rest with respect to the earth, but
viewed as having a centrifugal force acting on it with respect to the
universe MGS.] Already Newton viewed this as proof that the rotation
of the earth had to be considered as 'absolute,' and that the earth
could not then be treated as the 'resting' frame of the universe. Yet, as E.
Mach has shown, this argument is not sound. One need not view the existence
of such centrifugal forces as originating from the motion of the
earth; one could just as well account for them as resulting from the
average rotational effect of distant, detectable masses as evidenced in the
vicinity of the earth, where the earth is treated as being at rest.
In quite precise language, Einstein taught that the centrifugal force on
an object in the earth's rest frame (the condition satisfied by the hovering
geosynchronous satellite) is inadmissible as evidence of the rotation of
the earth, for in the earth's frame that force arises from the average rotational
effect of distant, detectable masses. This 1914 teaching of
Einstein is rather old news and it remains inconceivable that Nieto
would cite it, amusingly enough, without reading it. Or is there a tragic
pattern here?
Thirring observed in his opening paragraphs that the complete equivalence
between the reference frames, explaining such phenomena as the
geosynchronous satellite or Foucault pendulum equally well in a
geocentric reference frame, is secured by definition by Einstein's 1915
work: the required equivalence appears to be guaranteed by the general
co-variance of the field equations. This is what geocentrists mean when
they assert (much to Dr. North's disdain) that the mathematics is the
same for the heliocentric and geocentric models: Einstein's field equations
are structured to supply the necessary upward force on the
geosynchronous satellite in a geocentric as well as a heliocentric
framework. In fact, the only reason Thirring wrote his paper was because
the boundary conditions of Einstein's paper were geared for a finite
universe, so that Thirring set forth, in his own words, the mathematical
development of a rotational field of distant masses for a specific, concrete
example. After ten pages of tensor analysis, Thirring summarizes: By
means of a concrete example it has been shown that in an Einsteinian
gravitational field, caused by distant rotating masses, forces appear which
are analogous to the centrifugal and Coriolis forces. Hard again to imagine
Dr. Nieto's amusement in citing in his favor a source, even
second-hand, that negates his position. Harder yet to imagine Dr. Nieto
rejecting Thirring's argument, since it simply (and ably) develops
Einstein's own stated position.
Einstein's position has not lacked for continued, and contemporary,
treatment by the world's top relativity scholars. Another key (and, in
fact, decisive) reference cited in the video North refused to view was
taken from the journal, General Relativity and Gravitation, Volume 21,
No. 2, 1989, pgs. 105-124. Professors Ø. Grøn and E. Eriksen, in the article
Translational Inertial Dragging, take up, again, the issue of what
forces arise within a spherical shell of matter. (Recall that Dr. Nieto
wrote, there is no force inside a sphere of matter.)
Grøn & Eriksen inform us that The rotational inertial dragging effect,
which was discovered by Lense and Thirring, was later investigated by
Cohen and Brill and by Orwig. It was found that in the limit of a spherical
shell with a radius equal to its Schwarzchild radius, the interior inertial
frames are dragged around rigidly with the same angular velocity as
that of the shell. In this case of perfect dragging the motion of the inertial
frames is completely determined by the shell. (pg. 109-110).
Intriguingly, the authors point out that with reference to Newtonian
mechanics we talk of inertial force fields in accelerated reference frames.
However, according to the general principle of relativity, we may consider
the laboratory as at rest. We then talk of gravitational dragging
(acceleration) fields. The concept of "inertial forces," which may be
regarded as a sort of trick in Newtonian mechanics, is thereby made
superfluous. What is fascinating here is the recognition that the Newtonian
centrifugal force due to inertia (of which Dr. North is so fond) is a
fictitious force, and is a sort of trick. One would have expected the
geocentric model of the geosynchronous satellite to be the one filled with
tricks and fictional forces, but such is not the case. (The authors intend
no derogation of fictitious tricks in the Newtonian case, while buttressing
the claim that geocentricity posits actual rather than fictitious forces to
account for the behavior of objects such as geosynchronous satellites.)
This is explicitly stated on page 113, where G&E cite C. Møller in his
standard [1952] textbook on general relativity, from chapter 8: Einstein
advocated a new interpretation of the fictitious forces in accelerated systems
of reference. The "fictitious" forces were treated as real forces on
the same footing as any other force of nature. The reason for the occurrence
in accelerated systems of reference of such peculiar forces should,
according to this new idea, be sought in the circumstance that the distant
masses of the fixed stars are accelerated relative to these systems of
reference. The "fictitious forces" are thus treated as a kind of gravitational
force, the acceleration of the distant masses causing a "field of
gravitation" in the system of reference considered. Only when we work
in special systems of reference, viz. systems of inertia, it is not necessary
to include the distant masses in our considerations, and this is the only
point which distinguishes the systems of inertia from other systems of
reference. It can, however, be assumed that all systems of reference are
equivalent with respect to the formulation of the fundamental laws of
physics. This is the so-called general principle of relativity.
This quote is important on two counts. (I) The italicized sentence
(emphasis apparently in Møller's original textbook) is precisely what Dr.
Nieto denies in his argumentation, namely, the general principle of
relativity. But on what does Dr. Nieto base his arguments against
geocentricity? General relativity!
But count (2) is equally telling: Møller tells us that the only reference
frame in which we can exclude consideration of the distant masses of the
galaxies is in systems of inertia, which G&E more carefully define as
frames of reference in which the cosmic mass has no observed rotation
or translation acceleration. By this definition, the earth does not fulfill
the requirement for being a system of inertia, since the heavens are observed
to rotate around it. Therefore, Møller alerts us that we may NOT
omit the rest of the universe in deriving the forces acting locally on the
earth. Geocentrists assert as much, consistent relativists (e.g., Fred
Hoyle) assert as much, but inconsistent or forgetful relativists (e.g. Nieto)
fail to do their homework before taking up the issue.
Grøn & Eriksen develop the consequences of Einstein's position to the
hilt on pages 117-118 with an ironclad example: As an illustration of the
role of inertial dragging for the validity of the strong principle of
relativity, we consider the Moon orbiting the Earth. As seen by an observer
on the Moon both the Moon and the Earth are at rest. If the observer
solves Einstein's field equations for the vacuum space-time outside
the Earth, he might come up with the Schwarzchild solution and conclude
that the Moon should fall toward the Earth, which it does not. So it
seems impossible to consider the Moon as at rest, which would imply that
the strong principle of relativity is not valid.
This problem has the following solution. As observed from the
Moon the cosmic mass rotates. The rotating cosmic mass has to be included
when the Moon observer solves Einstein's field equations. Doing
this he finds that the rotating cosmic mass induces the rotational nontidal
gravitational field which is interpreted as the centrifugal field in Newtonian
theory. This field explains to him why the Moon does not fall
toward the Earth.
This is the decisive answer to Dr. North and Dr. Nieto. The Moon
always shows the same face to the Earth, so that from the point of view of
the Moon, the Earth is hovering 240,000 miles above it. In this picture,
the Earth is to the Moon, what a geosynchronous satellite is to our Earth.
The hypothetical Dr. North on the Moon solves his equations and
wonders, What holds the Earth up? Why doesn't it fall down here? And
Grøn and Eriksen have provided the answer, in complete consistency with
the work of Einstein (1913, 1914, 1950), Thirring (1918, 1921), Møller
(1952), Misner, Wheeler, Thorne (1973), Brill and Cohen (1966, 1968)
and Orwig (1978). Which is only natural, since it is unthinkable that
Einstein's disciples would break with him on the central tenet of his
general theory. Whereas Dr. Nieto seems to recognize the element of
curved spacetime in general relativity, he has failed to grasp the general
principle of relativity itself, from which the subsequent geometric model
flowed. In fact, he has (inadvertently, I would hope) lashed out at it.
In passing, note that the plane of rotation of the cosmic mass in
G&E's example is equatorial for the Moon general relativity provides
for explaining such geosynchronous phenomena only for equatorial satellites.
Dr. North wrongly assumes that in the geocentric model one can
place geostationary satellites over North Dakota, whereas the geocentric
literature has repeatedly taught that the field equations arising from cosmic
rotation permit stable geostationary satellites only over the equator,
and at the same prescribed height as that indicated by the Newtonian
methods Dr. North favors. This has been asserted in books, in journals,
on audiotapes, and videotapes. You'd have to try real hard to miss it.
While on the subject of Einstein and Thirring, let us examine Dr.
Nieto's final footnote: There is a gravimagneto effect related to the
Earth's rotation, which amusingly draws upon the work by Thirring cited
by Byl. Attempts will be made to measure this effect with a gyroscope
orbiting about a rotating earth (Schiff gyroscope experiment) and by two
satellites (LAGEOS I and III) orbiting about a rotating Earth in complementary
orbits. This is a prediction, whose test will hopefully come
about this decade.
Reading this somewhat flippant note, the certainty of the Earth's rotation
is flatly assumed as proven, and about to undergo additional, if superfluous,
proof. It is made to appear that Dr. John Byl erred by quoting
from a source that is being used to develop an experimental proof of the
earth's rotation! But all is not as it seems in footnote 13.
The fundamental reference to experiments like this is found, again, in
Misner, Wheeler & Thorne's Gravitation, pages 1117-1121, where the
experiment alluding to Nieto's complementary satellite orbits (one polar,
the other equatorial) is set forth in detail. MW&T tell us that the Earth's
rotation 'drags' the local inertial frames along with it. Notice that near
the north and south poles the local inertial frames rotate in the same
direction as the Earth does (W parallel to J), but near the equator they rotate in the opposite direction
(W antiparallel to J; compare W with the
magnetic field of the Earth!) (page 1119). By sending satellites in orbits
90 degrees apart, scientists can maximize the effect they are trying to
measure, which is very microscopic indeed (0.1 seconds of arc per year).
But Nieto's use of this argument falls to the ground, since the physics
being described here are those local to the gyroscope. Whether or not the
earth is motionless, the experiment yields the same result. In fact, the
very wording of the authors' argument deflates Dr. Nieto's point, since
they specify that the motion is relative between the Earth and the distant
galaxies. The force that the satellite experiment will be measuring is
precisely the kind of force (inertial frame dragging) that general relativity
scientists affirm holds up geosynchronous satellites when the earth is
taken to be at rest. So, the amusing part of Dr. Nieto's footnote 13 is how
badly it appears to have backfired.
If it be objected that a 1973 book, definitive tome though it be, is
somewhat dated in dealing with the 13th footnote, the literature is still
rich in more recent references. In General Relativity and Gravitation,
Vol. 20, No. 1, 1988, Cerdonio, Prodi and Vitale published an article entitled
Dragging of Inertial Frames by the Rotating Earth: Proposal and
Feasibility for a Ground-Based Detection, pgs. 83-87. The kind of
hardware that Dr. Nieto has in mind is there described in depth, where
the effect of rotation results in a net magnetization of the [instrument's
ferromagnetic] rod (pg. 85). The resulting magnetic flux is measured by
a device known as a SQUID. Yet, throughout the article, general
relativity is assumed, and relative motion is affirmed. The very effect itself
is described thus: The Lense-Thirring field due to the rotating Earth
is locally equivalent to a rotation in respect to distant stars
. Another
expression is the time average of the Earth's rotation with respect to distant
stars. The choice of coordinate system is arbitrary, and the field
mathematics follows after the preference of the physicist. Consult, by
way of comparison, the citations of Thirring discussed earlier, on which
this paper is dependent.
In short, we have here Thirring cited against Thirring, Einstein cited
against Einstein, and general relativity cited against general relativity.
Dr. Nieto deliberately and directly undermines his own physics, and his
arguments are manifestly self-contradictory. Consistent relativists have
never been hostile to geocentricity. Dr. Fred Hoyle pointed out that had
the trial of Galileo been held after Einstein published his general theory,
it would have resulted in an even draw by mathematical and physical
necessity. This is the legacy of general relativity: the overthrow of absolute
reference frames, and the democratization of all coordinate systems.
Let
it be clearly understood that the presentation of general
relativity's teaching on the geocentric model presented herein is central,
not peripheral or obscure, in Einstein's theory. It was plainly presented
to this author when he learned the fundamentals of general relativity and
geometrodynamics at the California Institute of Technology at the age of
16 (as a research fellow for the 1973 California Junior Science &
Humanities Symposium, under the supervision of Dr. Kip S. Thorne and
his associates and often studying, in fact, from the galley proofs of
Gravitation as it was being completed for publication). We can therefore
safely rule out the idea that Dr. Nieto's training somehow glossed over
this key proposition, in light of the fact that it is basic to Einstein's
theory, and that Dr. Nieto freely cites references from general relativity's
body of extant literature. He even indicates that he is actively seeking to
improve upon Enstein, which would, presumably, imply some mastery
and understanding of the theory one is attempting to supplant.
Therefore, Dr. Nieto's multiple citations from the world of general
relativity constitute academic suicide so far as this particular debate is
concerned. A geocentrist could have easily quoted the selfsame
references as Dr. Nieto did, but in so doing remained consistent with
Einstein. (There are, in fact, a number of geocentrists who base their
scientific understanding of the geocentric model directly upon general
relativity, at least one of which has conveyed this clearly and concisely to
Dr. North.)
To summarize: it is impossible to launch an attack on geocentricity on
the basis of general relativity, by definition. Proof of a moving earth is
simultaneously proof that general relativity is a myth.
This means that Dr. Nieto's analysis is shot through with factual errors
in regard to the primary force of his presentation. Some of his errors
are relatively innocuous, e.g., his description of Kepler's theory as involving
concentric spheres within which were inscribed regular
polygons. (Kepler used Platonic solids and not flat polygons.) Unfortunately,
most of the errors (factual, logical, and scientific) are simply fatal.
Dr.
Nieto, however, has also evidenced poor research in setting forth
geocentricity's distinctives. He asserts at least six times that
geocentricity has failed to predict certain phenomena that modern science
has correctly predicted. These alleged failures earn geocentricity a demotion
to the status of an antirational dogma. Through ignorance of
geocentric physics, Dr. Nieto imposes a Procrustean bed on those he
criticizes tantamount to stuffing words into the mouths of geocentrists.
The predictive power of geocentricity, and its more comprehensive
analytic range, will be addressed below.
First, however, consider Dr. North's accusation that modern
geocentricity has failed to produce fruitful results. Citing the parable of
the fig tree, wherein Jesus allowed it only four years of fruitlessness
before cutting it down, North finds geocentricity long overdue for immediate
termination. His arbitrary time-frame reveals a shallow view of
modern physics.
Galileo himself learned that merely setting forth a more elegant and
attractive geometry for orbital kinematics was inadequate to prove his
heliocentric model: he had to provide a complete, new theory of
dynamics to support it. This work, undertaken by one of the great intellects
of the period, was decades in the making. The formalism later
received its capstone in the work of Newton. This development spanned
more than a century of time. Dr. North's fig tree view finds its
analogue in the vitriolic attacks launched against Galileo by his enemies,
whose motivations were political and personal.
The new dynamics of Einstein were born in the work of mathematician
Georg Riemann, whose work on space curvature appeared so far
removed from any known practical application that it appeared completely
useless. Yet, gravitation is now described using his tensor notation,
which Einstein incorporated into the heart of his general theory.
With Einstein came a new dynamical theory, geometrodynamics, with
spacetime geodesics replacing outdated Newtonian trajectories. This
revolution took the better part of a century, from the laying of the mathematical
foundations in the mid-19th century to the completion of this
towering edifice of 20th century physics.
The case is no different with geocentric science: it, too, must develop
a brand new dynamical theory to support its description of the behavior
of the heavens. Unlike the peaceful development of Einstein's theory,
the geocentric model's slow codification is being undertaken under tempestuous
circumstances, in the face of ridicule, contempt, and self-
indulgent scorn, yet propelled forward by laborers operating near their
personal limits of physical stamina. Yet the work goes forward, and
should be allowed the time that was accorded the preceding revolutions
to bear their fruit. A preliminary overview of progress to date, giving a
glimpse of the dynamical theory being presently developed by modern
geocentric scientists, is herein set forth. Where the discussion touches on
Dr. Nieto's concerns and challenges, the connection will be pointed out.
(Keep in mind that not all geocentrists will agree with every detail of
the following summary it only purports to be representative of the
dominant strains of thought among top geocentric scholars.)
GRAVITY AND RELATED MATTERS
One would think that the only viable theories of gravitation worth
considering were Newton's and Einstein's, given the substance of Dr.
North's and Dr. Nieto's critiques. This gross oversimplification merely
misleads the unwary reader, historically and scientifically. Newtonian
gravity received competition from the LeSagean theory of gravity, and
the LeSage hypothesis even received the theoretical attention of Lord
Kelvin (On the Ultramundane Corpuscules of LeSage, Royal Society of
Edinburgh Proceedings, pgs. 577-589, 1871). The LeSage theory is a
physical theory of gravitation, meaning there is an actual, understandable
physical reason why gravitation exists and can be felt (unlike abstract notions
such as action-at-a-distance and curved spacetime). The theory has
undergone important revisions in the hands of geocentrists over the last
decade, but the fundamental idea is retained.
George-Louis LeSage developed his theory in the late 1770's (the
work was almost certainly plagiarized). He postulated that the universe is
filled with countless infinitesimal particles, which he termed ultramundane
corpuscles. These corpuscles are in extremely rapid motion,
analogous to molecules in a gas, and are colliding continually with
material objects from all directions, so that a net pressure is applied to all
objects within this kinetic ocean of ultramundane corpuscles.
In the case of a spherical mass in the middle of this corpuscular flux,
the net force on the mass is zero, since the pressure is applied to it
equally from all directions. However, in the case of two spherical objects
near each other within this flux, the one sphere will block some of the
corpuscles from colliding with the other, and vice versa. The objects
shield one another from a portion of this flux, as determined by their
mass and separation, such that there are more corpuscles pushing them
together along the line joining their centers than there are keeping them
apart. The closer they are, the greater the corpuscular pressure becomes.
LeSage calculated the well-known inverse-square law from this shielding
effect. In his theory, gravity is not a pull it is an external push. According
to this view, a man's weight reflects the difference between how
many corpuscles are hitting him from above, compared to how many are
hitting him from below and is a function of the earth's mass attenuating
the upward-directed flux. (In fact, the mathematics of LeSagean
mechanics is the mathematics of attenuation.) It is easy to see why the
LeSagean theory is termed a physical theory of gravitation: its fundamen
tal principle is simple enough for a child to grasp, without metaphysical
mumbo-jumbo.
Advocacy for the theory declined after Lord Kelvin observed that the
collisions between the hypothetical particles and normal matter would,
over long periods of time, involve a heat transfer sufficient to melt
planetary objects. (Subsequent physics showed how such particle collisions
can be elastic and thus avoid any degradation of flux energy to
heat but by then, LeSage had been forgotten in the stampede to
canonize Einstein.)
LeSagean gravitational theory is an important component in the
dynamical thinking of most geocentrists, excepting those who prefer
basing their position on general relativity. The theory has predictive
power, for the equations of attenuation make it clear that the shape and
orientation of an object determine the magnitude of force on it. In the
LeSagean theory, a barbell held horizontally is heavier than one held vertically,
and a feather will drop faster in a vacuum than a small ball of
lead-predictions that directly oppose the dynamics of Newton, Galileo,
and Einstein. Until the last decade, the predictions of LeSage would have
been laughed off the stage, until instruments sensitive enough to detect
such anomalies were pressed into service. When these anomalies were
discovered, modern science rushed in to herald the discovery of some
fifth fundamental force, termed (erroneously) supergravity by some excited
researchers. But they had been beaten to the theoretical punch by
more than two centuries by the gravitational theory championed by the
geocentrists.
The peculiar behavior of pendulums just before and after an eclipse,
and within deep mine shafts, has likewise been troubling to the standard
gravitational theories, Einstein's included. Saxl and Allen's pendulum
measurements during the solar eclipse March 7, 1970 were startling, and
subsequent measurements by Kuusela (Finland: July 22, 1990 and
Mexico: July 11, 1991) still reflected anomalous, though less severe,
deviations. (Cf. Physical Review D3, 823 and General Relativity and
Gravitation, Vol. 24, No. 5, 1992, pg. 543-550). Mineshaft measurements
of the gravitational constant evaded conventional analysis (Cf.
Holding & Tuck, A New Mine Determination of the Newtonian Gravitational
Constant, Nature, Vol. 307, Feb. 1984, pgs. 714-716). These
anomalies were predicted by the LeSagean theory, not by Newton, not by
Einstein.
An ultrasensitive Cavendish torsion balance was pressed into service
in the mid-1970's to determine experimentally how sound the inverse-
square law of gravitation was (Long, Experimental Examination of the
Gravitational Inverse Square Law, Nature, April, 1976, Vol. 260, pgs.
417-418). The apparatus revealed systematic discrepancies of 0.37%.
Considering how relativity, theory makes much ado of infinitesimal
anomalies it predicts, this reported glitch is enormous and is predicted
by the LeSagean model promoted by modern geocentrists.
Here are several key experimental effects predicted and/or adequately
explained only by geocentrists pursuing their theory of dynamics: one
could legitimately turn the tables on Dr. Nieto and ask, Where was
modern physics? Its theories predicted something other than what was
measured!
Modern physics tends to respond with a yawn to such challenges, and
Dr. Nieto's view that the theories that fit the data best are the ones worthy
of acceptance is, in fact, naive. When comparisons between theories are
made, the faithful will prove loyal to their theories, not the data. When
confronted with evidence demonstrating the superiority of one theory
over others (e.g., A Comparison of Results of Various Theories for Four
Fundamental Constants of Physics, International Journal of Theoretical
Physics, Vol. 15, No. 4 (1976), pp. 265-270), the world of science merely
shrugged, unmoved in its pre-existing biases. (In the example cited, the
best theory, being anti-Einsteinian, gained no adherents for having met
the experimental criteria better than did its cousins.) (This author, in
phone conversation with a chief research scientist at the Laurence Livermore
Labs in 1992, pointed out that the electron diffraction effect had
been again recently derived using classical physics. Quantum mechanics
was developed in part because classical physics could not account for this
effect, but now that this was no longer true, the scientist dismissed the
news with an annoyed So what? His precommitment to modern QCD
theory colored his scientific worldview completely.)
The LeSage theory was developed mathematically, in painstakingly
rigorous detail, and then underwent an important conceptual evolution in
the mid-1980's. What if the ultramundane corpuscles were compressed
to a greater density, so that more of them filled a smaller volume? In fact,
what if they were squeezed shoulder to shoulder, so tightly packed that
they could only jostle one another, but were no longer free to rocket
through space like gas molecules do? Do the same rules of shadowing
and attenuation apply now that the so-called LeSagean gas has become an
ultradense mass? Would the pressure effects transmit in the same way as
the original theory stipulated? Indeed, the same principles hold, except
that acoustic pressure waves transmit the background gravitational pressure
through this ultradense matrix.
This ultradense medium of geocentric physics is identified as the
Biblical firmament. It has a density so great that a teaspoon of the firmament
would weigh more than a trillion universes combined. (The computed
density is termed the Planck density, 1094 g/cm3.)
Such assertions seem to earn Dr. Nieto's label of being merely ad
hoc. But a little research (in contrast to cavalier dismissal) would reveal
that the constituent elements of this geocentric postulate can be found in
the most highly respected scientific journals and publications. In fact, the
literature has been of inestimable help in obliterating objections to the
geocentric notion of a physical, ultradense firmament.
In The Very Early Universe (Gibbons, Hawking & Siklos, Ó 1983
Cambridge University Press), M.A. Markov defines a particle termed a
maximon, possessing the 1094 g/cm3 density defined above, or more
precisely, 3.6x1093 g/cm3 (pgs. 359, 361). He writes, If a black hole has
internal Planck dimensions and an external mass equal to the Planck
mass, the matter density in it is quantum (pq). If it is not decaying, such a
black hole represents some degenerate case: it can neither collapse, nor
anticollapse if one assumes that the mass density cannot exceed pq. In
other words, the requirement of a limiting density is very strong and leads
to nontrivial consequences (pgs. 366-367). Markov then explores the
implications of a liquid made up of such maximons, and points out that
from a topological point of view the maximon liquid is a model of a
quasi-isotropical space (ibid). This citation is important, for geocentrists
are often criticized for their description of empty space as a medium
millions of times denser than lead, leading to the common objection that
physical objects could never possibly move through so dense a medium.
But the physics affirms the fact that such a medium can function as a
space, through which other objects can freely pass.
(A maximon is not necessarily a black hole, according to Markov, but
may be a particle of the same Planck dimensions, but with a structure
essentially different from a black hole. Their gravitational radius coincides
with their Compton length, ibid, pg. 365. This is pointed out here
to cut short any critique that the firmament model clearly leans on general
relativity by relying on the existence of microscopic black holes.)
Note Markov's use of the word, nontrivial. This word is the most
appropriate term one could apply to the firmament of the geocentrists
any object as stupendously massive as the firmament is asserted to be is
to be taken very seriously, since it dwarfs the rest of the universe in comparison.
It is ironic that geocentrists are routinely called upon to abandon
this quirky, inconsequential notion, whereas secular science has continued
to probe the idea theoretically and experimentally, while unaware
of its ultimate implications.
In short, empty space is not a vacuum; it is not a nothing, it is a
something. Correspondingly, it has properties and attributes that
nothingness cannot possess. Dr. Robert J. Moon, Professor Emeritus in
Physics at the University of Chicago, published an article in 21st Century
, May-June, 1988, pg. 26ff, entitled Space Must Be Quantized, addressing
precisely this issue. He points out that according to accepted
theory, free space is a vacuum. If this is so, how can it exhibit impedance?
But it does. The answer, of course, is that there is no such
thing as a vacuum, and what we call free space has a structure.
[This
impedance] equals 376+ ohms. This reactive, energy-storing impedance
is a natural corollary of geocentric theory and its ultradense firmament; it
has not been accounted for by conventional science, and is not contained
within either Newton's dynamics or Einstein's gravitational field equations.
Where was conventional science in accounting for this effect?
The ultradense firmament of the geocentrists pops up in the literature
in various guises, as theorists attempt to account for the experimental data
flooding into the various centers of higher learning. Princeton's John A.
Wheeler is credited with being the first to describe what is now called
spacetime foam, the notion that on ultramicroscopic scales empty space
is filled with countless ultradense particles popping into existence and
then becoming instantly extinct (1957). In 1968 he observed that the
central new concept is space resonating between one foamlike structure
and another. Noted astronomer Stephen Hawking developed the implications
of this foam, which is distinctive in that on extremely small scales
empty space is jam-packed with violently random activity and enormous
mass (virtual mass in the modern terminology). (Cf. MW&T, Gravitation
, pgs. 10, 11, 1180.) The physics at this scale, and the mathematics
used to describe it, are daunting even to the cognoscenti. The geocentric
firmament differs from the conventional understanding in affirming that
the underlying particles are permanent and stable, whereas modern
physics prefers to regard them as undergoing continuous and extremely
rapid creation and annihilation, like an unstable foam. Both theories put
the density of the particles at the Planck density.
In Physical Review D. Third Series, Volume 47, Number 6, March 15,
1993, pg. R2166ff, Redmount and Suen explore the question, Is Quantum
Spacetime Foam Unstable? Utilizing fluctuating black holes and
wormholes as constituents of the structure of space is a serious liability,
the physicists conclude, because the inherent instability of these structures
makes them unsuitable candidates as components of the underlying
structure of space. There must be, in fact, strong constraints on the nature"
of the structure of space at scales down to the so-called Planck
length (about 10-33 cm), the size of a maximon. This recent research
points away from the Wheeler & Hawking models and toward the firmament
of the geocentrists, which does not suffer from the stability problem
associated with the hypothetical objects (wormholes, blackholes) populating
the general relativity menagerie.
In the geocentric hypothesis, the firmament particles, although unable
to break ranks because their neighbors are too close, are yet in rapid
motion, colliding rapidly and continuously with their neighbors. (The
fact that they possess rotational spin, something first proposed by Maxwell,
will be taken up a little later in connection with electromagnetic
theory.) Their behavior has a somewhat stochastic, or random, nature
as clearly taught as far back as LeSage in 1778. Their behavior is classical,
but being as small as they are, they influence and induce other larger
particles to behave in ways heretofore thought explicable only on quantum
mechanical grounds. And, in point of fact, the tenets of the
geocentrists' firmament theory have emerged in connection with quantum
mechanics, going as far back as Louis De Broglie's work in the 1920's.
An excellent discussion of this matter is set forth in J. P. Vigier's article,
De Broglie Waves on Dirac Aether: A Testable Experimental
Assumption, Lettere Al Nuovo Cimento, Vol. 29, No. 14, Dec. 6, 1980,
pg. 467f. Vigier wrote, Since Dirac's pioneer work it has been known
that Einstein's relativity theory (and Michelson's experiment) are perfectly
compatible with an underlying relativistic stochastic «aether»
model. Inherent to this model is Einstein's idea that quantum statistics
reflects a real subquantal physical vacuum alive with fluctuations and
randomness. This concept of a nonempty vacuum has been recently
revived not only to yield a foundation to the stochastic interpretation of
quantum mechanics but also to explain causally possible nonlocal super
luminal interactions resulting from the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen paradox.
Indeed, if a forthcoming experiment of Aspect confirms their existence,
the only way out of the resulting contradiction between relativity and the
quantum theory of measurement seems to lie in the direction of an extension
of the causal stochastic interpretation of quantum mechanics. This
assumes the existence of causal subquantal random fluctuations induced
by a stochastic «hidden» thermostat proposed by BOHR, VIGIER and
DE BROGLIE. (pg.467)
Although to the layman the last citation might appear impenetrably
dense, the main points can be made clear. There are two schools of
thought in the world of quantum mechanics, termed the Copenhagen Interpretation,
and the Stochastic Interpretation (sometimes called the
Causal Interpretation). The Copenhagen Interpretation is rather counterintuitive
and mystical sounding to the layman. One example will suffice:
flip a coin and cover it up immediately before looking at it. Is it
heads or tails? The Copenhagen Interpretation asserts that the coin is
simultaneously heads AND tails while it is covered, but can be forced to
fall back into either heads or tails once you take your hand off it and observe
it. It then suddenly flips to a unique state by the mere act of observation.
The
Stochastic Interpretation, unsatisfied with this somewhat bizarre
worldview, asserts that the various unusual quantum effects measured on
subatomic scales have an actual physical cause (hence, Causal
Interpretation). If there is difficulty in simultaneously measuring the
momentum and position of a subatomic particle (the Heisenberg Uncertainty
Principle), it may be due to actual background noise: this is the
point of view of the Stochastic Interpretation. This source of noise is the
nonempty vacuum Vigier refers to, a level of physical reality discernible
on ultrasmall scales, and freighted with significance.
Vigier's prologue used the word superluminal, meaning any entities
or interactions that travel faster than the speed of light. He pointed out
that if Aspect's then-upcoming experiment measured any superluminal
interactions, the contradiction between general relativity and the stochastic
theory would have to be decided in favor of the stochastic theory.
Translation: if Aspect's experimental result is positive, the consequences
would be hostile to general relativity and favorable to the firmament
model, the one stochastic model that satisfies the stability constraints
stipulated by Redmount and Suen in March,1993.
Vigier reminds us that Dirac «aether» rests on the idea that through
any point O there passes a flow of stochastic particles and antiparticles
(pg. 468), reminiscent of the original LeSage theory. He then introduces
spin to the stochastic particles making up what he calls a background sea
of activity. He even prefers (pg. 470) that his stochastic particle undergo
only short range motions: contact particle-particle collision type
interactions. This is the same restraint geocentrists place on their
ultradense firmament model.
Vigier, working with Petroni, published an important article a year
earlier than the last reference, in Lettere Al Nuovo Cimento, Vol. 26, No.
5, Sept. 29, 1979, pg. 149, entitled Causal Superluminal Interpretation of
the Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Paradox, wherein he demonstrates that his
stochastic model does not encounter the same pitfalls that the competing
tachyon theory of Sudarshan, Feinberg, & Recami encounters in explaining
faster-than-light interactions and objects. Says he, We show in particular
that superluminal, phaselike, phononlike, collective motions of the
quantum potential in Dirac's «aether» do not induce the well-known
causal paradoxes of tachyon theory. At the conclusion of his exposition
he points out, It is interesting to note that this elimination of causal
paradoxes is only possible in a subquantum model built on a Dirac's
vacuum and cannot be applied to theories where superluminal signals are
carried by tachyonic particles. He proposes allowing superluminal signals
to be «acoustical» waves with associated quantum potential
in
harmony with the better attested geocentric firmament model.
(Geocentric astronomer Dr. Gerardus Bouw has performed some of the
seminal computational work in this area of firmament dynamics in the
early 1980's.)
The experiment by Aspect that J. P. Vigier was anticipating was performed,
and the results published in Physical Review Letters, Vol. 47,
No. 7, August 17, 1981, pgs. 460-463. Aspect, with partners Grangier
and Roger, introduces his results with a little history: Since the development
of quantum mechanics, there have been repeated suggestions that its
statistical features possibly might be described by an underlying deterministic
substructure. The apparatus, which performed polarization correlation
on photon pairs, involves hitting an atomic beam of calcium with
a krypton ion laser and a second Rhodamine laser. The results confirm
the existence of superluminal (faster-than-light) interactions, and served
to further buttress the stochastic interpretation of quantum mechanics,
which, as has been pointed out, has been evolving closer and closer to the
geocentrist's firmament hypothesis. (The experiment was conducted
again with greater precision, agreeing with the first experiment, and the
new results published in Physical Review Letters Vol. 49, No. 2, July 12,
1982, again pointing to the geocentrist's firmament model by proving the
existence of the quantum potential.)
The issue of superluminal phenomena is significant in light of the
common theoretical challenge to geocentric cosmologies that they require
every object past Saturn to travel faster than the speed of light in order to
complete a daily revolution around the earth. Just as most of the preceding
technical citations were provided and explained in the famous
videotape that fell on closed eyes, so too are the following references.
In the February 1992 issue of the American Journal of Physics, W. M.
Stuckey published an analysis titled, Can galaxies exist within our particle
horizon with Hubble recessional velocities greater than c? (pgs.
142-146). Stuckey proposes to measure the speed at which galaxies are
traveling away from us, utilizing their red shift. His test object, a quasar
with a red shift of 4.73, is computed to be receding from us at 2.8 times
the speed of light. So why is it a problem when geocentrists propose
faster-than-light velocities for celestial bodies, and not a problem when
mainstream scientists take such measurements in stride?
Stuckey explains that the quasar is fleeing from us so rapidly (at what
would at first glance appear to be a completely impossible velocity) due
to a property of the space between here and there. The vacuum between
us and the quasar is stretching and expanding, and thus carries the quasar
away from us faster than the speed of light. When modern scientists inform
us that objects can travel faster than light due to the expansion of
space, we marvel at their wisdom and learning. When geocentrists inform
us that objects can travel faster than light due to the rotation of
space, we marvel at their insanity. Yet, both models stipulate the same
origin of the superlight speed, namely, the intrinsic properties of the
space in which the objects are placed.
The idea of a rotating universe has been addressed in the secular
literature on many occasions. Yu. N. Obukhov, in the recent study
Rotation in Cosmology (General Relativity and Gravitation, Vol. 24,
No. 2, 1992, pgs. 121-128), observes that Since the first studies of
Lanczos, Gamow and Gödel, a great number of rotating cosmological
models have been considered in the literature. Nevertheless the full understanding
of observational manifestations of cosmic rotation is still far
from reach. Moreover, there is a general belief that rotation of the
universe is always a source of many undesirable consequences, most
serious of which are timelike closed curves, parallax effects, and
anisotropy of the microwave background radiation. The aim of this paper
is twofold to show that the above phenomena are not inevitable (and in
fact, are not caused by rotation), and to find true effects of cosmic
rotation. Unfortunately, Obukhov refrains from putting the other foot
down: Here we shall not enter into a discussion of [the] philosophical
significance of cosmic rotation (though, in our opinion, the analysis of its
relation to the Mach's principle is of great interest). Nonetheless, he follows
the evidence to its conclusion: As we can see, pure rotation can be,
in principle, large, contrary to the wide-spread prejudice that large vorticity
confronts many crucial observations.
Rotating universe models have continued to receive analytic scrutiny
(cf. Soviet Physics Journal, March 1992, JETP 74 (3), Accounting for
Birch's Observed Anisotropy of the Universe: Cosmological Rotation?,
by Panov and Sbytov; also General Relativity and Gravitation, Vol. 25,
No. 2, 1993, pgs. 137-164, Synchronized Frames for Gödel's Universe,
by Novell, Svaiter and Guimares). So the question remains: if outer
space can stretch faster than the speed of light and carry objects with it,
why can't it rotate faster than light and do the same? Sauce for the
general relativity goose is sauce for the geocentric gander.
Dr. Nieto raises some observational challenges for geocentric cosmology,
beginning with the parallax effect. There are two schools of thought
among geocentrists as to how parallax arises (and if the quantum
mechanicists can have two schools of thought, why not the geocentrists?).
The pure form of geocentricity centers the stars on the earth, and
describes the resulting annual stellar shifts by placing the Earth at one
sink of a conformal mapping. This procedure has been worked out in
rigorous detail for the two-dimensional case by James Hanson, and
agrees with the observed phenomena. (This paper regards this model as
pure inasmuch as it conforms to the original cosmology of Tycho Brahe
without modification.) The modified Tychonic model centers the stars
on the Sun, so that the stars participate in the Sun's annual migration,
with the observed parallax being directly predicted by the subsequent
geometry. This second model would satisfy the requirements that any
consistent relativist would impose on a legitimate geocentric frame of
reference, and may well even have direct and indirect Biblical support.
In the geocentric model, the firmament is in daily rotation around the
earth, and undergoes annual oscillations as well. This motion of the fir
mament is evidenced in the Sagnac effect, the well-known Coriolis
forces, and by geosynchronous satellites (or, in a more Tychonian vein,
geostationary satellites). In the geocentric model, we agree that if the
heavens ceased their rotation, the satellites would fall to the earth. But
when the heavens are postulated to be in motion, it is Dr. Nieto's equations
that are deficient, not ours.
There are four fascinating aspects of the geocentric model. (1) The
notion of a structured firmament analogous to a crystal lattice permits one
to consider elementary particles (electrons, protons, neutrons, etc.) to be
phonons (quantized vibrations) within that crystal. (Cf. P. J. Bussey,
The Phonon as a Model for Elementary Particles, Physics Letters A
176, 1993, pgs. 159-164.) Bussey shows how phonons exhibit all the experimentally
measured properties of elementary particles, including particle
splitting and wave collapse. The appeal of the theory is in its predictive
power and correlation with reality. Its difficulty is that an appropriate
medium must exist in which these vibrations are to propagate,
namely, a medium having the properties of the geocentrist's firmament.
Because the geocentric firmament's fundamental ultramassive particles
are packed as tight as atoms within a crystal, it serves as the ideal lattice
structure for a phonon-based theory of particle structure to succeed.
The notion of space being some kind of crystal (in harmony with the
geocentric and Biblical views of the firmament) is a topic of serious discussion
in modern physics. Holland and Philippidis have explored the
idea in their article, Anholonomic Deformations in the Ether: A Significance
for the Electrodynamic Potentials, (Hiley & Peat, eds., Quantum
Implications, Ó 1987 Routledge, pgs. 295ff). They write, In attempting
to discover the classical significance of the Am,
[electromagnetic potential MGS] we have at our disposal several
clues. Bohm has suggested an analogy between the Aharonov-Bohm effect
and the dislocation of a crystal lattice
. Dirac showed how an ether
which at each point has a distribution of velocities which are all equally
probable would be consistent with relativity, and alternative approaches
to the quantum theory by Bohm and Vigier have indicated that a suitably
fluctuating ether can contribute to an understanding of the microdomain.
We recall that much effort was expended in the nineteenth century in
trying to understand electromagnetic processes in terms of stresses set up
in an ether treated as an elastic solid.
Philippidis, Dewdney and Hiley pointed out that as far as the quantum
domain is concerned, space cannot be thought of simply as a neutral
back cloth. It appears to be structured in a way that exerts constraints on
whatever processes are embedded in it. More surprisingly still, this structure
arises out of the very objects on which it acts and the minutest
change in any of the properties of the contributing objects may result in
dramatic changes in the quantum potential
. It is clear, therefore, that
the quantum potential is unlike any other field employed in physics. Its
globalness and homogeneity in the sense of not being separable into
well-defined source and field points indicate that it calls for a different
conceptual framework for its assimilation. (Quantum Interference and
the Quantum Potential, Il Nuovo Cimento, Vol. 52B, No. 1, July 11,
1979).
The firmament of the geocentrists is explored under the name of the
quantum potential by some, and by different names by other researchers.
G. Gaeta, writing in Physics Letters A 175 (1993), pgs. 267-268, wrote of
an unknown medium originating the observed quantum Brownian
noise. Says he, If we accept this picture, the particles of the EPR experiment
are in permanent contact with a NGV stochastic process. This
functional synonym for the geocentrist's firmament is named after the
scientists whose constraints color its characterization, Nelson, Garbaczewski
and Vigier. Gaeta treats this medium as completely universal:
The universality of quantum mechanics corresponds to the universality
of the NGV process: this means that no physical system or particle can be
regarded as truly isolated, as every physical system or particle being
subject to quantum mechanics is a least in contact with the universal
NGV process.
The concluding paragraph in the article, Causal Particle Trajectories
and the Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics (Quantum Implications,
pgs. 169-201) exposes the dilemma for modem physics in telling language:
The interpretation of Bohr and of de Broglie-Bohm-Vigier both
emphasize that the fundamentally new feature exhibited by quantum
phenomena is a kind of wholeness completely foreign to the post-
Aristotelian reductionist mechanism in which all of nature in the final
analysis consists simply of separate and independently existing parts
whose motions, determined by a few fundamental forces of interaction,
are sufficient to account for all phenomena. The difference arises in the
methods for dealing with the situation. One thing however is clear; the
organization of nature at the fundamental level is far more complex than
mere mechanistic models can encompass. The ghost cannot be exorcised
from the machine.
(2) The firmament itself provides for a complete gravitational theory
based on the physics of shadowing and attenuation, yielding predictive
results beyond those of conventional theory. By introducing the element
of spin, and thus angular momentum, to the firmament subparticles, the
antisymmetric properties of electromagnetic fields obtain, being construed
as a transfer of angular momentum particle by particle and giving
rise to the well-known perpendicularity of the electric and magnetic
fields. In Dr. Bouw's model, the firmament even accounts for the strong
nuclear force that holds protons and neutrons together in atomic nuclei: as
two nucleons make actual contact, the shadowing effect goes asymptotic
according to the known attenuation expression, and the total force is all
inward, its magnitude characterized by the Yukawa potential. This model
therefore is a nascent unified field theory, or what is now termed a GUT
(Grand Unification Theory), that accounts for all available physical effects
that can be measured by science, from gravitation, electromagnetism,
strong nuclear force, the Uncertainty Principle, elementary particle
structure, etc. In other words, the early work of developing a new
dynamics is well underway, as propounded at the outset.
The third and fourth developments are recent, homespun insights not
heretofore published, and therefore not yet subjected to peer review. Although
potentially premature, the benefit from airing them outweighs the
risk; I invite the reader to weigh the following notions carefully.
(3) It is often objected that if geocentricity were true, and the rotating
heavens were dragging Foucault pendula and weather systems around,
why doesn't that force pull on the earth itself and drag it along, causing it
to eventually rotate in sync with the heavens? It appears that this
straightforward application of torque to the earth should cause it to rotate
in sum, but this turns out to be an oversimplification. As the heavens
rotate, and the firmament rotates on an axis through the earth's poles,
each firmament Al particle (the ones comprising the ultradense lattice)
also rotates with the same angular velocity. Ironically, this is precisely
the reason the earth can't be moved. In MT&W's Gravitation, pg. 1119-
1120, we are invited to ponder the following scenario: Consider a rotating,
solid sphere immersed in a viscous fluid. As it rotates, the sphere
will drag the fluid along with it. At various points in the fluid, set down
little rods, and watch how the fluid rotates as it flows past. Near the
poles the fluid will clearly rotate the rods in the same direction as the
sphere rotates. But near the equator, because the fluid is dragged more
rapidly at small radii than at large, the end of a rod closest to the sphere is
dragged by the fluid more rapidly than the far end of the rod. Consequently,
the rod rotates in the direction opposite to the rotation of the
sphere. This analogy can be made mathematically rigorous. Now
reverse the situation. If we want to cause the sphere to rotate clockwise,
we would need to turn the rods at the poles clockwise, and the ones at the
equators counterclockwise. (Consider the equator as a big gear, and the
firmament Al particles as small gears that engage it. It is intuitively obvious
that the small gears must always turn in contrary motion to the
large one at the equator.) This picture is clear then: to turn the sphere, the
rotation of the particles (MT&W's rods and this author's gears) at the
poles must be the opposite of that at the equator.
However, in the case of a rotating firmament, all the particles are
rotating in the same direction, with the angular velocity common to the
entire firmament. The equatorial inertial drag is in the opposite direction
as that acting near the poles. Using calculus, one integrates the effect
from the center of the Earth outward in infinitesimal shells, showing that
the Earth is in fact locked in place, the resulting inertial shear being distributed
throughout the Earth's internal volume. It could be demonstrated
that were the Earth to be pushed out of its station keeping position, the
uneven force distribution would return it to its equilibrium state. Intriguingly,
the significance of these internal forces on seismic stress, plate tectonics,
and the earth's magnetic field may prove central, if so be that
these postulates survive the inevitable peer review to come.
(4) Consider again Grøn & Eriksen's position that a rotating cosmic
mass imposes an upward force on a geostationary satellite. (They used
the Earth as a synchronous satellite for the Moon in their article to illustrate
the principle.) They posit that the centrifugal force on the satellite
arises from a cosmic non-tidal gravitational field pulling up on the satellite.
Consider, then, the behavior of light traveling to the Earth from distant
celestial objects: would it not also be subject to the effects of this
cosmic nontidal inertial pull? Logic would dictate that, yes, in accordance
with the late Dr. Richard Feynman's Lectures in Physics, Vol. 2, pgs.
42-10 & 42-11, as well as the extended discussion in MT&W's Gravitation
, pgs. 1055-1060, incoming light subject to the induced gravitational
field will lose energy and thus decrease in frequency, according to the
known relations that govern calculation of gravitational red shifts.
If true, then the rotation of the cosmic mass could be responsible for
the red shift heretofore understood as a Doppler consequence of the Big
Bang. This in turn would provide a new basis for measuring the distance
of celestial objects, one wholly different than the system erected upon the
Doppler view of the red shift, which could involve a significant remapping
of the heavens.
But more intriguingly, this result, if confirmed, would be hostile to
general relativity, because the theory would require the red shift to be observed
whether it is the Earth or the heavens that are rotating, whereas on
classical grounds it would only be expected if the heavens were rotating,
and the result would be the same whether measured from the Earth, from
a satellite, or from the space shuttle. At this point in time, the experimental
evidence militates against relativity on this effect, so that relativity
would either need to neutralize the red shift predicted under a rotating
cosmos scenario, or abandon its core postulate.
It would then appear that geocentrists are more than willing to risk
making scientific predictions to put their hypotheses to the test. Some
have already passed muster, but others are too recent to have gone
through the requisite shaking-out period. This is to be expected in the infancy
of the development of a new dynamical theory that embraces every
aspect of reality, from unthinkably massive and immense objects to the
world of the ultramicroscopic reality underlying the atomic realm.
FINAL COMMENTS
This position paper was written over the course of four consecutive
evenings in order to be published in a timely way. This necessitated
omission of a large number of mathematical equations, as well as heavy
editing to limit its length. For readers interested in examining the
material encompassed by this paper in greater depth, including the source
equations, an unabridged version will be made available in November,
1994. (The paper will include an extensive Scriptural survey, including
the surprising New Testament evidence for geocentricity, which creates
immense difficulties for the opposing position, since Chaldean starcharts
taught heliocentricity centuries prior to the New Testament's
composition.) Send a self-addressed, stamped envelope (postage sufficient
to cover 3 ounces of postal matter) to the author, M. Selbrede, c/o
Ticom Technologies Inc., 9205 Alabama Avenue, Suite E. Chatsworth,
CA 91311.
Chalcedon Report, P.O. Box 158, Vallecito, CA 95251, U.S.A. |