Posts Tagged ‘Galaxy’

The measurement of time.

Friday, September 18th, 2009
PhotonQ-Young solar System
Image by PhOtOnQuAnTiQuE via Flickr

By Donald Swarbrick.

We measure time according to our solar system but, why do we think that our time is the only time measurement in the universe, and why do we assume,every stage of events taking place out there is measured by our time?
It is by us here on earth, but not necessarily by everyone in the universe.

We know there are enormous planets in deep space within our vision, and when we can reach even further we will discover solar systems in a very much bigger scale than ours.

If,life does exist on one of these massive planets,(which it will, of that I have no doubt) their time scale will be very different to ours, as it will be measured according to their solar system which, if so very much larger, will reflect a very much slower pace of time, therefore, their measurements of time and distance to other planets, and galaxies, even their lifespan itself, will be calculated in a completely different manner.

Our solar system, in comparison to one like that, will seem to them, like theirs in a fast forward motion, and our lifespan merely a blip in time, which of course it is, but we have never stopped to think just how insignificant our solar system is, and always assume that we are the superior race in the universe.

Mankind as we know it has many weaknesses, one of them being his lifespan, cut short by sickness, wars, or other disasters that can befall earth, or simply old age which in most cases lasts less than one hundred earth years. A blip in universal time.
We are barely here in this form, before we are gone again, leaving our ideas, or discoveries for future generations to elaborate on, which limits the progress we make.

Another life form evolving in a solar system so much larger than ours, that works in a completely different way to ours, will have evolved much stronger than us, with less weaknesses to shorten their lifespan.
The very fact that their time measurement is so much longer than ours will make their lifespan longer, if not eternal, as their solar system having evolved billions of years before ours would have given them time to perfect life, also given the fact that their ideas and discoveries will not have been hampered by death.

Another reason to believe such a planet as this would have a different time scale is, that if it used our time scale, one side of the planet would be earth years behind the other, or earth years ahead, just as we in Britain are hours behind Australia, or ahead of America, so in theirs, they will have calculated time to suit their solar system, long before time was needed on earth.

Now that puts the measurement of time and distance into a different prospective, which would make the universe a much smaller place for them and would enable them to travel through space without having to worry about distance.

If you look at the universe  through their eyes, the galaxies they, or we can see are not billions of light years away, but only a short journey away in the exceptional conveyances they will have perfected on that planet, therefore they will have reached these stars. They will be able to confirm my theories in my last post that what you are seeing out there is happening now, and not some light reflection from an event that happened light years ago.
It stands to reason that the light source HAS to be there if we can still see it in a structural form, solid or gas, otherwise it would  just be light energy we would see, and we would have nothing to travel to in the case of dying stars.

Scientist contradict themselves by looking out at other solar systems light years away, and recognize a planet orbiting around a star, and when telling us about it lead us to believe what they have witnessed is occurring out there now, but then they try to tell us that the forming galaxies or the light from the dying star they see, happened billions of light years ago, and the event is only reaching us now.
What is the point of looking out into the universe for other life forms if you think the light reflection you are looking at happened many light years ago, because according to their theories, how would we know if the promising planet that could hold life still exists, or if it died, and the light reflection of its death throes have not reached us yet?

If we want to unfold the mysteries of space, we have to take into consideration, that we are only a speck of dust in the universe in comparison to the enormous planets with life on them, and our life span is only a fraction of time in comparison to theirs.
We have to admit our inferiority in the universe, accept that other life forms that may look the same as us, can reach us, and have reached us.
That is what the bible is all about, people from another solar system being on earth.
You do not have to believe the bible but you do have to admit that if such a planet exists, everything I said is possible, and given everything I have said, you have to admit that more than likely such a planet does exist.
Out there in the universe, the measurement of time, and distance IS completely different, and will bring a whole new definition to our observations, and calculations that we have surmised from our lowly position in space.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Dark matter – Black holes.

Friday, July 3rd, 2009
Lensing by a black hole. Animated simulation o...

The thing that puzzles us most about space now is, how black holes are formed and what the dark matter in space consists of, as we think, that by solving these questions we will discover more about the birth of the universe.

In my opinion, black holes originate in a similar way to tornados, although they gather their momentum by chemical reactions from undetected gases within the dark matter interacting to ignite a circular motion, which increases with such velocity it creates a vortex so massive and violent that it becomes an enormous space blender, drawing everything in its range inside it, where more chemical reactions and fusions take place until it spits out such a potent mixture, it results in new galaxies being formed.

The dark matter will conceal within it, gases and chemicals that we have no knowledge of, or will be able to trace with our instruments, mainly, owing to the fact that they do not exist in our part of the universe, and its only if we can  reach manually, these outer limits where they are, will we ever be able to distinguish them.

The answer to the origin of the universe does lie within these black holes, as it would have been the first, and largest of them that kicked off the chain reaction that we now know as the universe.

Gases swirling in the vast emptiness that was there before the BIG BANG, would have eventually met up setting off a chemical reaction that resulted in the biggest vortex you could imagine, and over billions of years it would have enlarged so much that every kind of gases and atoms that were concealed in the dark matter would have been gathered within it, which set off other reactions, ending up in the explosion we know as the BIG BANG, where the first galaxies would have formed once the blast eased enough to allow the planets to settle.

The reason we have new black holes forming is because,  the outward forces of the blast carrying the debris of the original BIG BANG, disturbs the dark matter it is being pushed through, which draws the same ingredients  that started the first chain reaction together, resulting in black holes smaller than the original but big enough to create galaxies.

Although the original black hole formed the biggest percentage of the universe, the smaller black holes scattered throughout space continue to explode periodically, creating stars and constellations, boosting the outward progression of the universe caused by the BIG BANG, hence the reason the universe is still expanding like a giant firework spreading out over the sky.

Once the ingredients that cause the reactions burn out, and there are no more black holes forming, the universe will slow down until it eventually comes to a stop, retracting back towards the largest planet at it’s centre, drawn by it’s gravitational pull, not just dropping out of the sky like the burned out firework, but regrouping at the centre where it all began, and only God knows what will happen then, because the planet at the centre of it all is heaven, formed at the core of the BIG BANG.

If you observe what happens when an explosion takes place you will notice that the largest pieces of the solid object that has been blown up, stay close to the centre of the blast, while the smaller fragments scatter and spread, with the smallest travelling farthest.

The largest solid object from the big bang, spun around, where over a period of billions of years it became rounded in shape, and it’s spinning motion affected the nearest solid objects to it, which caused them to spin on their own axes, creating gravity, and eventually life was formed on some of the planets.

With heaven being formed first, life would have originated there, hence the reason for God’s people  being so much more advanced than the rest of the universe, gaining knowledge, and utilizing the  materials sourced on their planet over the billions of years head start they had over any other planet, leading to their immortality, space travel, and their ability to assist the universe when need be.

I have to wonder though, if even God can tell us where the first wisp of gas came from, or the contents of the first atom, questions that I think will never be answered no matter how much else we discover about this amazing chemical reaction we have become part of.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]