Post by Pincho Paxton on May 24, 2017 12:10:27 GMT
First a link...
Michelson–Morley experiment
That experiment was performed in 1887, now in 2017 we need to go back to it, because gravity flows from space, and is the same as the Aether, but it isn't really that hard to account for with computers.
You need to understand what a magnetic pole really is. As the Earth moves through space gravity flows into it from all directions which creates poles of lines around the Earth. Each pole is a different shape due to the Earth direction of momentum, and spin, but each pole compensates for itself using the same physics... the force of gravity as a directional 1D pressure line, a pole. Each pole around the Earth is normalised with an equal amount of negative force in the opposite direction. Every quark is compensated for, building up a normalised planet from opposing physics.
So if you painted all of the poles around the Earth red, and blue in the direction of every quantized movement of the Earth, all of the red poles would be converged with a new blue pole, and all of the blue poles would be converged with a new red pole 1 + -1 = 0. Gravity is compensated for by magnetism as an outflow, gravity is the blue pole, and magnetism is the red pole, meaning that there would be no Aether wind, and using the The Michelson/Morley Experiment as a successful proof of that idea.
The Michelson/Morley Experiment didn't disprove an Aether it told us how it had to work.
You could put that into a computer simulation for a sphere moving through space, and the space around it will line up with the Earth... Cosmic ripples come into focus and The Cosmic Microwave Background Is The Earth
Each forward movement, and spin of the Earth is held together by opposite forces of negative mass. Movement creates anti-movement in space, and gravity maintains a constant due to magnetism.
Pincho Paxton
Michelson–Morley experiment
That experiment was performed in 1887, now in 2017 we need to go back to it, because gravity flows from space, and is the same as the Aether, but it isn't really that hard to account for with computers.
You need to understand what a magnetic pole really is. As the Earth moves through space gravity flows into it from all directions which creates poles of lines around the Earth. Each pole is a different shape due to the Earth direction of momentum, and spin, but each pole compensates for itself using the same physics... the force of gravity as a directional 1D pressure line, a pole. Each pole around the Earth is normalised with an equal amount of negative force in the opposite direction. Every quark is compensated for, building up a normalised planet from opposing physics.
So if you painted all of the poles around the Earth red, and blue in the direction of every quantized movement of the Earth, all of the red poles would be converged with a new blue pole, and all of the blue poles would be converged with a new red pole 1 + -1 = 0. Gravity is compensated for by magnetism as an outflow, gravity is the blue pole, and magnetism is the red pole, meaning that there would be no Aether wind, and using the The Michelson/Morley Experiment as a successful proof of that idea.
The Michelson/Morley Experiment didn't disprove an Aether it told us how it had to work.
You could put that into a computer simulation for a sphere moving through space, and the space around it will line up with the Earth... Cosmic ripples come into focus and The Cosmic Microwave Background Is The Earth
Each forward movement, and spin of the Earth is held together by opposite forces of negative mass. Movement creates anti-movement in space, and gravity maintains a constant due to magnetism.
Pincho Paxton