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Post by Pincho Paxton on Mar 4, 2022 8:59:02 GMT
Inverse Square Law As Physics What mechanical process creates the inverse square law? I think I have figured it out!
Gravity creates all things by flowing into negative mass holes. When it flows into a hole it then spins in that hole. The spin inside the hole creates mass, and gives that mass a scale based on the spin radius. The spin radius is determined by a confinement scale, and a confinements scale is determined by everything around the outside of the spin. So for example if you had 10000 balloons in a room they could inflate until they all touched, and would then have a confinement scale.
The inverse square law is based on this confinement scale which can fluctuate when gravity gets trapped. Gravity continually flows into the Earth in a chain reaction. It flows in, it collides, then the confinement scale is reduced so it escapes through gaps in the in-flow. You now have two scales, the in-flow scale, and the out-flow scale. The out-flow scale will bump the in-flow on occasions, and reduce it, which is how the confinement scale works. Larger scales get bumped more than smaller scales which means that larger scales reduce faster than smaller scales. Also the smaller scale can expand into the area that the larger scale reduces from. The two scales even out over a distance. This scale factor for gravity is the inverse square law. It is where the out-flow of gravity gradually merges with the in-flow of gravity. You get the blackness of space with a red shift just before it.
Pincho Paxton
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Post by Pincho Paxton on Mar 4, 2022 9:20:09 GMT
I'm giving myself the Pincho Prize for that...
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