Posts

The Aether problem of our age

According to the mainstream explanation, the dark matter is one hypothetical particle or another that interacts with itself either very weakly or not all, and that does not have any way of dumping its energy to other physical entities to form aggregates, and that bizarrely seems to interact with matter only gravitationally (weak interaction is not totally ruled out).  There is no stronger indication of a crisis of  historic proportions  in physics today than the twin problems of dark matter and dark energy.  In an effort to "explain away" the  increasing  number of associated problematic observations, mainstream cosmologists and astrophysicists are digging their heels either in the mire of the so-called Lambda-CDM model of the universe or in proposing yet more "aethereal" explanations. In my opinion, these problems have become the "aether problem" of our age. Here is the latest example of this game: The common plane of orbit of satellite galaxies around th

Dark Energy and Dark Matter, A Unified Picture

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Here is a short on why I think the Universe is rotating, based on my paper titled Dark Energy and Dark Matter As Inertial Effects, available at https://arxiv.org/pdf/1210.3021.pdf .

Centrifugal force demo

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This is a computer simulation demo of the centrifugal force, which I claim is what is responsible for the so-called "dark energy."

Coriolis effect demo

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Here is an impressive demonstration of the Coriolis effect, which I claim is responsible for—together with the cosmic centrifugal force—the so-called "dark matter."

'God is random' article featured on bookforum.com

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God bookforum.com

19 reasons as to why it was a Big Spin, not a Big Bang

For the details, please read my " Dark Energy and Dark matter as Inertial Effects " paper on arxiv.org.

Big Spin, Not Big Bang!

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My spacetime-rotation model of the universe (see my papers in arXiv and blog posts here) proposes, effectively, to replace Big Bang with a more "natural" Big Spin which, although its own origin needs to be dealt with, does capably unify,  and naturally and  physically explain many seemingly unrelated and confusing outstanding cosmological problems: the cosmic inflation, dark energy, dark matter, and the "mysterious" intrinsic spin (angular momentum) of elementary particles, and the physical meaning and origin of Hubble's constant and Planck's constant. Again, please see my original dark energy-dark matter papers on arXiv for details. Here I would like to share with you something very exciting that I came across very recently about one of the founding theoreticians of the Big Bang theory:  George Gamow. After I came up with my rotary model of the universe, without any prior knowledge of the literature, in October 2010, I learned from Wikipedia that Kur