Post by Pincho Paxton on Dec 17, 2015 15:59:35 GMT
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Quasar outburst revises understanding of universe, quasars
Pincho says...
The Universe is quantized by quantum holes, because propagation requires a hole which is negative mass to create mass. The holes move together to create mass, because propagation stops at a hole, which means that the hole is now directional to the incoming propagators, and the incoming propagators that create photons with mass have to collide at 6 points. This only leaves 1D propagation available to incoming physics the Y axis. But the Y axis can rotate around a point, so photon energy can travel through quantum tunnels joined together by holes. So the fog of visible photons are in fact tunnels of propagating gravity moving through a rotating Y axis. We don't see light travelling sideways to us, because those tunnels are not joined to magnetic tubes attached to our eyes. All a gamma ray has to do to propagate in our direction is rotate a Y axis towards a sensor on Earth. The propagation will then use the tubes, there will be stops at junctions, but the stops elongate the magnetic propagation, so speed up the next move, the propagation is stroboscopic in nature. The length of a tube between quantum holes is speed.
The second puzzle requires a computer simulation. The black hole is a gravity collision that starts around 6 points, and then turns into a fractal which includes magnetic tubes. The magnetic tubes then collide, and gravity gets trapped, and that is Dark Matter. This fractal pushes energy away from a black hole at a distance. A simulation of this effect will create everything in the Universe.
Pincho Paxton
Quasar outburst revises understanding of universe, quasars
"This is the first puzzle: how is it possible that gamma rays of such high energies made the trip all the way from this very distant quasar to Earth without getting lost in the fog of visible photons in between?
"The second puzzle was that the high-energy gamma rays were produced far from the black hole that powers them, not close to it, as you would expect," Errando said.
"The second puzzle was that the high-energy gamma rays were produced far from the black hole that powers them, not close to it, as you would expect," Errando said.
Pincho says...
The Universe is quantized by quantum holes, because propagation requires a hole which is negative mass to create mass. The holes move together to create mass, because propagation stops at a hole, which means that the hole is now directional to the incoming propagators, and the incoming propagators that create photons with mass have to collide at 6 points. This only leaves 1D propagation available to incoming physics the Y axis. But the Y axis can rotate around a point, so photon energy can travel through quantum tunnels joined together by holes. So the fog of visible photons are in fact tunnels of propagating gravity moving through a rotating Y axis. We don't see light travelling sideways to us, because those tunnels are not joined to magnetic tubes attached to our eyes. All a gamma ray has to do to propagate in our direction is rotate a Y axis towards a sensor on Earth. The propagation will then use the tubes, there will be stops at junctions, but the stops elongate the magnetic propagation, so speed up the next move, the propagation is stroboscopic in nature. The length of a tube between quantum holes is speed.
The second puzzle requires a computer simulation. The black hole is a gravity collision that starts around 6 points, and then turns into a fractal which includes magnetic tubes. The magnetic tubes then collide, and gravity gets trapped, and that is Dark Matter. This fractal pushes energy away from a black hole at a distance. A simulation of this effect will create everything in the Universe.
Pincho Paxton