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- GRAVITY4.ASC
- this file courteously shared by Joseph Misiolek
- October 21, 1990
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CAN GRAVITY be INDUCED?
-
- Observational Evidence and Verifiable Proof for
-
- A Dynamic GRAVAC Sun
-
- by
- Stephen Paul Goodfellow
-
- 1987
-
- CONTENT:
-
-
- Introduction Page 2 & 3
-
- A Solar Shell 3
-
- Proof 4 & 5
-
- Elusive Neutrinos 5 & 6
-
- Sunspots 6
-
- Thought Model 6 & 7
-
- Plasma: The Super-Hot Gas 7 & 8
-
- Rudiments of the dynamic GRAVAC Cycle 8 & 9
-
- Helioseismology - The Ring of Truth 9 & 10
-
- Related Natural Phenomena 10
-
- Mr. Science & the Breezy Room 11
-
- Nature's Gravity Wells 11 & 12
-
- Consequences of a GRAVAC Sun 12 & 13
-
- Conclusion 13 - 16
-
- Credits 16
-
- References 17 & 18
-
- Page 1
-
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- It has long been believed that gravity is the fundamental cause
- of solar radiation.
-
- The presently popular Hydrogen/Fusion Core theory rests on
- the assumption that the mutual gravitational attraction of the
- Sun's individual atoms override all other acting forces, thereby
- causing the Suns mass to contract. This in turn creates the
- internal pressures which inaugurate nuclear fusion within the Sun's
- core.
-
- This scenario appears to be reasonably logical at a glance, but
- when viewed in the sharp light of observational evidence, it
- becomes glaringly obvious that the reasoning upon which the
- Hydrogen/Fusion Core theory rests is unsound and quite erroneous.
-
- Despite the fact that virtually every major solar observation is at
- odds with this popular solar model, physicists continue to subscribe
- to it because there does not seem to be a logical alternative.
-
- The wound caused by this dilemma is deep and there for all to see;
- the ability to control a sustained fusion reaction continues to
- elude researchers, chiefly because of the alchemic approach with
- which they attempt to apply their craft.
-
- The reason for this sad state of affairs is simple: Fusion research
- is so costly that in their eagerness to magnetically cage the
- fusion reaction, scientists forgo the necessary research needed to
- understand what goes on in the fusion process.
-
- It is not unlike a blind man attempting to restrain a beast he
- cannot see; the blind man builds traps and cages without
- understanding the nature of the beast.
-
- Such an attempt must surely end in failure.
-
- PLASMA is the name of the beast that we must strive to understand;
- it is a super hot gas of disassociated electrons and protons.
-
- When united within a common magnetic field it is capable of
- performing incredible configurations.
-
- Its nature is so different from solid, liquid or gas states, that it
- has been designated a state of matter in its own right: a plasma,
- the fourth state of matter.
-
- Faced with such an awesome discovery, it would seem reasonable
- to assume nothing is as we expected it to be. In the light of this
- newly discovered state of matter, we should proceed as if
- perceiving the universe for the first time.
-
- NONE of the four known forces in the universe ( the Strong, Weak,
- Electromagnetic and gravitational,) nor their interactions with the
- known states of matter - may be taken for granted when we know there
- is a new player on the field.
-
- When the dynamic state of the plasma was realized, solar physicists
- seem to have been reluctant to consider the Sun anew; the
-
- Page 2
-
-
-
-
-
- intermittently arriving new knowledge of plasma states continue to
- be ignored or hastily incorporated into a solar theory already
- beset with unreconcilable contradictions, resulting in a hodge-
- podge of discontinuous conjectures.
-
- The focal point of this current dilemma lies in the fact that
- our science community suffers from an unshakable faith in
- the inviolableness of mass/gravity. It is taken for granted
- that the gravitational force is dependent on the quantity of
- matter present.
-
- This is an unproven conjecture - an act of faith.
-
- Such an attitude has for too many years confined potentially
- creative ideas within constrictions which in reality do not exist.
-
- I believe strongly that such unbending dogma does not belong in the
- quest for truth, because it has no relation to the objective
- universe.
-
- A SOLAR SHELL
-
- Our Sun is empty; its mass is distributed in a shell about an
- "Absolute vacuum."
-
- As I shall demonstrate, an Absolute vacuum induces gravity; it is a
- rift upon which mass/energy space gravitationally implodes.
-
- This implosion continuously heats the Sun's plasma which in turn
- maintains the Sun's Absolute vacuum. I call this the Gravity/Vacuum
- Cycle, or the GRAVAC Cycle.
-
- The electromagnetic potential of a given quantity of mass in a
- plasma state is 1 X 10 to the 40th times stronger(1) than its
- gravitational potential.
-
- Because of this, the Sun can radiate by the interlocking of an
- induced gravitational force that is brought about by the
- electromagnetic force.
-
- This comes about because the Sun's plasma is magnetically
- polarized, repelling electrons from electrons and protons from
- protons. By this process the mass of the Sun is magnetically
- repulsed and flies apart creating an Absolute Vacuum.
-
- In turn, this Absolute Vacuum induces gravity. The induced gravity
- restrains the Sun's plasma from further outward expansion, and it is
- the struggle between the inhibiting induced gravity and the
- repulsive magnetic properties of the plasma which cause the solar
- shell to radiate.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 3
-
-
-
-
-
- PROOF
-
- For this solar model to work, it requires that absolutely no mass,
- nor radiation can travel through an Absolute vacuum.
-
- Therefore, the experimental evidence of this solar model rests
- on the following proof:
-
- *It can be demonstrated that neutrinos cannot pass through the Sun*
-
- Small subatomic particles called neutrinos emanate from stars.(2)
-
- To an observer on Earth, each star has its own neutrino fingerprint,
- which can be determined by the angle of neutrino approach and the
- different neutrino energy levels that individual stars produce.
-
- Because neutrinos are so small and have no charge, most are able to
- pass through the Earth without hitting anything.
-
- Astrophysicists believe that a flow of neutrinos would pass through
- the Sun without the majority of the neutrinos being stopped by
- collisions.(3)
-
- But is this so?
-
- Imagine that you are observing neutrinos emanating from an energetic
- star which is about to be eclipsed by the Sun. When the star is
- eclipsed, present logic would dictate that neutrinos from the
- eclipsed star would pass through the Sun.
-
- I propose that they will not.
-
- It is my prediction that the neutrino flow from the star will stop
- at the moment of occultation ( when the star passes behind the sun.)
-
- The reason for this is because the Sun's interior is not a ball of
- mass in conventional space, as it is presently believed;(4) on the
- contrary, it is an Absolute vacuum through which nothing passes.
-
- Of course, it is not so easy to look for neutrinos passing through
- the Sun. An actual experiment would be more complicated, but
- could probably be performed along these lines:
-
- Due to the fact that neutrino collisions are scarce, one has to
- rely on a record compiled through time in order to get an
- accurate determination. You will need a computer and as extensive a
- compilation of recorded data of neutrino collisions as possible.
-
- The greater span of time the records cover, the more accurate the
- result.
-
- Take the orbit of the Sun ( as seen from Earth,) and break it
- down into 365 windows or 'sectors' on the plane of the ecliptic,
- one for each day of a year.
-
- The Sun will pass through all 365 sectors in one year, spending 24
- hours in each sector.
-
-
-
- Page 4
-
-
-
-
-
- Design a program for the computer so that it will list all the
- neutrinos with an angle of approach that comes within the band
- divided into 365 sectors.
-
- Eliminate all neutrinos from your data that show energy
- levels consistent with those of our Sun. Now compile the sectors
- that the Sun was in each day. Compare them to the 364 other sectors
- that the Sun was not in.
-
- If present theories on stellar physics are correct, then neutrinos
- from stellar and galactic sources should flow unimpaired through the
- Sun, and there will be NO DISCERNIBLE QUANTITATIVE DIFFERENCE
- between the Sun sectors and the 364 other sectors that the Sun was
- not in. This will not be so.
-
- I predict that the data will exhibit a CONSISTENT DECREASE
- of interstellar and intergalactic neutrinos within the solar
- sectors.
-
- ELUSIVE NEUTRINOS
-
- This chapter offers observational evidence which led me to
- my conclusions.
-
- Problem:
-
- Dr. Raymond Davis of the Brookhaven National Laboratory has been
- monitoring the emanation of neutrons from the Sun since 1967, and
- he has demonstrated that the flow of these neutrinos amounts to less
- than 1/3 of the amount anticipated by the current hydrogen fusion
- core theories.(5) Why?
-
- Solution:
-
- The deficiency in the neutrino count may be accounted for as
- follows; neutrinos originate from, or near, the Sun's surface.
-
- Since nothing can travel through the Sun's Absolute vacuum
- interior, only the neutrinos produced on the side of the Sun facing
- us reach the Earth.
-
- Those neutrinos originating from the opposite side of the Sun
- cannot penetrate the Sun's absolute vacuum interior and so escape
- the Earth based observer.
-
- This is the cause for the lesser neutrino flow observed to be coming
- from the Sun.
-
- Problem:
-
- When sunspots occur on the Sun's photosphere, the neutrino count
- drops.
-
- Neutrinos have no charge and so cannot be affected by the magnetic
- field of sunspots on the Sun's surface.
-
- If neutrinos originate from the Sun's core and travel outwards, then
- sunspots on the photospheric surface should have no effect on the
- neutrinos.
-
- Page 5
-
-
-
-
-
- These subatomic particles should pass to the observer unimpeded,
- yet the neutrino count is diminished during sunspot
- activity.(6) Why?
-
- Solution:
-
- Neutrinos originate near the Sun's photospheric surface.
-
- Within sunspots there is decreased temperature and luminosity,
- so there is less likelihood of neutrino production; hence a
- decrease of neutrinos during sunspot activity.
-
- SUNSPOTS
-
- Problem:
-
- Sunspots are depressions in the Sun's photospheric surface.(7) If
- the interior of a sunspot is closer to the Sun's supposed core, why
- does it get cooler and darker and not hotter and brighter in these
- areas?
-
- Solution:
-
- The Sun has no core. A sunspot depression is darker because it
- is closer to the Sun's Absolute vacuum interior.
-
- THOUGHT MODEL
-
- If the Sun's mass is only a thin shell of matter, how does one
- account for its powerful gravitational attraction?
-
- It is time for a thought model.
-
- Imagine the air in front of you. Imagine now that you can apply
- a force to expel the air away from a given volume. First, you
- may notice that the most efficient shape to maintain a vacuum is a
- sphere.
-
- Next, you might observe that the exterior air is attracted to
- the vacuum -- an attraction which falls away with the square
- of the distance from the source. This attraction is a feature which
- exhibits the same characteristics as the force of gravity.
-
- To illustrate this concept, stir a cup of tea or coffee and
- carefully pour in some milk. Notice how the interior of the vortex
- moves faster than the area further out from the vortex.
-
- A vortex has a low pressure interior and high pressure exterior.
- It behaves in a manner identical to that of the planets orbiting the
- Sun, in that both phenomena obey Kepler's Second Law of Planetary
- Motion (8) - which is a notable characteristic of gravity.
-
- Another way you can observe this attraction at work is to hold
- a vacuum cleaner nozzle up to a source of smoke. The attraction of
- smoke to the vacuum nozzle will fall off with the square of the
- distance from the nozzle, just like gravity.
-
- Let us take our thought model into the real universe.
-
-
- Page 6
-
-
-
-
-
- Space - any space - anywhere, contains a measure of mass/energy.
-
- The proof of this is the Background Radiation which pervades our
- universe.
-
- Even the 'thinnest' space is a veritable soup of radiation,
- virtual particles and even whole atoms passing through any given
- volume at phenomenal speeds.(9)
-
- It follows that the laws of pressure that we applied to our thought
- model should hold true anywhere in the universe; wherever there is
- pressure, a vacuum will attract.
-
- If an Absolute vacuum were possible, what behavior would we expect
- of its nature? How would the universe respond to such a phenomenon?
-
- Dictionaries describe a vacuum as: 'A space devoid of matter.' This
- definition is no longer a sufficient description of a vacuum, since
- it appears that all space in the Universe contains some measure of
- mass/energy.
-
- Perhaps a better description would be: 'A Vacuum is a volume
- devoid of space.'
-
- Such a volume might be quite different from conventional space.
- Since temperature is a result of mass/energy space, it is
- reasonable to assume that the temperature of an Absolute Vacuum
- must be absolute zero.
-
- If time is a consequence of mass/energy space, then an Absolute
- Vacuum must be without time. An observer within such a field would
- not be affected by the time frame of exterior space; time would
- stand still for that observer while the exterior universe raced on.
-
- A magnetic field is a manifestation of mass/energy but it is
- NOT mass/energy in itself. Because of this it seems reasonable to
- assume that a magnetic field may exist within an absolute vacuum.
-
- In our thought model we used an imaginary force to maintain
- a continuous vacuum. Is there any way of demonstrating the existence
- of this force?
-
- PLASMA: THE SUPER-HOT GAS
-
- As I mentioned in the introduction, it was not long ago, that
- physics classified matter into only three states: Solid, liquid, and
- gas.
-
- It was not realized until recently that a gas heated to a very
- high temperature does not obey the law of gasses; it displays a
- behavior unique to its own nature and scientists have only recently
- begun to probe its secrets.(10)
-
- So different is this state from a regular gas, that it has been
- classified as a fourth state of matter: a plasma.(11)
-
- Because all stars consist of this super-hot gas, it is estimated
- that over ninety percent of the known universe exists in a
- plasma state.(12)
-
- Page 7
-
-
-
-
-
- Put simply, plasma is a super-hot gas in which electrons
- are stripped away from protons, placing particles of like polarity
- in the same camp.
-
- Plasmas which are shot through a plasma gun ( a magnetic field,)
- and into a vacuum tube display well defined structure.
-
- Unfortunately, because of the speed (120 miles per second,) with
- which the plasma makes its way down the vacuum tube, photos reveal
- only a glimmering of the complexity that can be contributed to
- plasma structure.
-
- However, it is known that the plasma structure can evolve into a
- helix-like flow composed of two separate streams, one consisting of
- electrons and the other of protons. Furthermore, it has been
- observed that the structure as a whole maintains a stable shape
- that can best be described as a cross between a doughnut and a
- "Slinky" - a toy spring that can 'walk' down a staircase, - turned
- in on itself.(13)
-
- It is significant that electrons and protons can organize
- into separate camps, because like particles of the same charge
- repel one another.
-
- If it is possible to produce a plasma configuration where the
- mutual repulsion of particles occur, then it is likely that the
- volume left in their wake is an Absolute Vacuum.
-
- It strikes me that it would be a fruitful enterprise to monitor
- some future plasma experiments with a sensitive gravimeter to see if
- known plasma configurations exhibit inducing gravity
- characteristics.
-
- RUDIMENTS OF THE DYNAMIC GRAVAC CYCLE
-
- Although it is highly possible that the following scenario is a
- gross oversimplification, I believe it to be an accurate thumbnail
- rendition of the Sun's mode of propagation.
-
- I call it the Solar Gravity/Vacuum Cycle, or the Solar GRAVAC cycle:
-
- Imagine a gaseous giant, perhaps a little bigger than Jupiter.
-
- The gravitational sum of its mass causes intense pressure and so
- generates atomic fusion at its center.
-
- The fusion reaction splits up protons and electrons which are
- forced into like camps, where they repel one another.
-
- However, the plasma can only travel outwards a finite
- distance, because it has left an Absolute Vacuum in its wake.
-
- The attraction of mass/energy space towards the Absolute Vacuum
- causes a gravitational implosion.
-
- The plasma has nowhere to go. It cannot go further inwards, because
- of the repulsive magnetic field; nor can it expand outwards, due to
- the gravity holding it back - what's a plasma to do?
-
-
- Page 8
-
-
-
-
-
- To answer this question, try the following: Rub your hands
- together fast and furious. See how they get hot?
-
- The solar hydrogen shell is under intense pressure at the
- vacuum boundary and this causes the Sun's radiation. The
- released energy maintains the plasma because electrons are stripped
- from protons and so the cycle repeats, thereby maintaining the
- radiation of the Sun.
-
- The energy needed to maintain a total vacuum of a given volume
- is equal to the energy radiating from its boundary. In the case of
- our sun, that is 3.38 X 10 to the 33 ergs/sec.(14)
-
- Let us now review the cycle:
-
- A primordial giant planet - larger than Jupiter - inaugurates
- standard gravitational compression in the core of proto-
- sun
- ...Pressure...Nuclear Fusion.....Plasma.....Electrons
-
- form
-
- Camp/Protons
-
- form
-
- Camp....Magnetic repulsion....Induced Gravitational Attraction...
-
- And then back to
-
- ' Pressure.'....
-
- This concept is in harmony with the conservation of angular
- momentum, in that it accounts for the relatively slow rotation of
- our Sun.
-
- Jupiter, the fifth planet from the Sun, has by far the
- greatest portion of angular momentum of the Solar System. If the Sun
- contracted from a cloud of hydrogen, one would expect the center to
- rotate the fastest, like a spinning ice skater will rotate faster
- if she draws her arms into her side.
-
- The GRAVAC scenario suggests that the early proto-Sun's spin was
- considerable while it was a dense ball of mass, but as it
- inaugurated nuclear fusion and expanded into a thin shell of plasma,
- it lost its angular momentum - like the ice skater letting her arms
- out and slowing down.(15)
-
- HELIOSEISMOLOGY - THE RING OF TRUTH
-
- A whole new science has recently sprung up called Helioseismology.
-
- It has been observed that the Sun vibrates, rather like a bell.
- It is presently believed that solar resonances are propagated
- acoustically from the Sun's core.(16) But is this so?
-
- Solar oscillations came as a complete surprise to solar theorists
- because one does not usually associate structures that get denser
- towards their center as good candidates for effective
- oscillators.
- Page 9
-
-
-
-
-
- Hollow structures, such as bells are good oscillators; so too is a
- GRAVAC Sun.
-
- We know from studying the powerful magnetic fields that erupt
- from sunspot depressions that the Sun is capable of propagating
- interior magnetic fields reaching thousands of gauss.(17)
-
- It is this interior field which causes the Sun's magnetically
- sensitive outer shell to dance upon the interior magnetic field,
- like the oscillations produced by an acoustic speaker.
-
- A blind-folded person would be hard pressed to tell whether he
- is being addressed directly or via a speaker.
-
- The same is true for Helioseismology; the observer is blind to the
- interior and so the information is interpreted in the light of
- present concepts of solar theory.
-
- Helioseismologists have discovered a condition in the Sun's
- shallower layers which is at variance with conventional core
- models: Through frequency splittings resulting from the Sun's
- rotation, it is observed that the rotation actually decreases with
- depth. It is hard for any core theory to come to terms with this
- lack of angular momentum.(18)
-
- This observation of the Sun suggests an inversion - a sun
- turned inside out.
-
- RELATED NATURAL PHENOMENA
-
- Vocal cords produce compressional waves ( high and low pressures )
- that travel through the air.
-
- These waves are received by the ear, which converts them into
- electro-chemical impulses that are distributed to the relevant
- centers of the brain.(19)
-
- The ear also acts as a mechanism of body balance; the semi-
- circular canals allow the brain to determine the position of
- the head in relation to the gravitational attraction of the Earth.
-
- If pressure and gravity were two separate and unrelated forces,
- would one not expect to find two distinctly separate organs to
- monitor these phenomena?
-
- A plane flies through the air; its forward motion produces a flow
- of air above the wing which creates a standing low pressure
- center.(20)
-
- The plane is sucked into the air, away from the Earth's
- gravitational field.
-
- Again we observe an interplay between the forces of pressure
- and gravity.
-
- When a rocket in space fires its engines, the same interplay of
- forces are at work. The rocket places a high pressure behind
- itself; in so doing it can be said that a low pressure center
- exists in front of the rocket, and the rocket moves in that
- direction.
- Page 10
-
-
-
-
-
- MR. SCIENCE & THE BREEZY ROOM
-
- I have constructed a very special room. Its design allows for a
- flow of air through the ceiling and floor of the room. It has no
- windows and whoever is inside is unable to make any exterior
- observations.
-
- As with Einstein's famous accelerating rocket,(21) the observer is
- free to draw conclusions from any phenomena that take place in the
- room, but he is unaware of the exterior environment.
-
- We now place a fan above the roof of the room which forces
- air downwards. Air flows through the room and Mr. Science takes
- note.
-
- The room is now placed on a high tower some distance above the
- Earth.
-
- Imagine that we now pile an enormous quantity of air above the
- tower.
-
- Due to the Earths gravitational attraction which causes the
- atmosphere to 'hug' the planet, the air will flow back towards the
- Earth and regain its composure.
-
- In doing so, the air will also flow through Mr. Science's room -he
- takes note.
-
- When asked about the nature of the two experiments, he tells us that
- he believes them to be identical - a flow of air from top to bottom.
-
- He is unaware that the first experiment was the result of pressure;
- nor does he know that the second experiment was caused by gravity.
-
- He therefore concludes that the nature of the force that propelled
- the air through the room was the same in both instances; to Mr.
- Science, pressure_and_gravity_are_identical!
-
- NATURE'S GRAVITY WELLS
-
- Earlier, I mentioned that a vortex in a stirred cup of coffee mimics
- the force of gravity. This phenomena is not limited to our cup;
- it manifests itself throughout nature's domain.
-
- The low pressure eye of a hurricane is a strangely tranquil place in
- which there is little wind and the blue sky can be seen above, while
- on all sides the high pressure fury circulates.
-
- Such is the power of the hurricane's eye that the ocean has been
- observed to rise several feet higher in this center than the ocean
- level surrounding the eye.(22)
-
- This rise in sea level is caused by the low pressure of the
- hurricane's eye; the mass of the ocean in the eye is attracted to
- the relative vacuum.
-
- As with gravity, the attraction to the eye falls off with the square
- of the distance from its center.
-
-
- Page 11
-
-
-
-
- Spiral galaxies mimic the vortex and their shape leaves us with
- some perplexing questions: If galaxies are gravitationally-bound
- systems in dynamic equilibrium, they should consist of enough
- matter to hold themselves together.
-
- Surprisingly, it would appear that there is not enough matter
- present in galaxies to achieve this, thereby giving rise to
- the famous 'Missing Mass Problem'.(23)
-
- How does a spiral galaxy obtain the additional gravitational
- force when it does not have a corresponding quantity of matter?
- Is it possible that its high energy center is an Absolute Vacuum?
-
- If the GRAVAC scenario proves correct, then it is not an
- unreasonable speculation that galactic centers of a spiral galaxies
- are inducing gravity without a corresponding quantity of mass.
-
- THE CONSEQUENCES OF A GRAVAC SUN
-
- The concept of Absolute Vacuums may go some way to explain Olber's
- Paradox, which states that, if space is infinite, why is the sky not
- bright with radiative sources?
-
- If space is interrupted with Absolute Vacuums, - and there would be
- as many of these as there are stars - then any given area of space
- would in effect be 'shielded' from other quadrants.
-
- If the Sun is merely a shell of mass and so has considerably less
- mass than hitherto expected, then it cannot afford to merely drift
- around living off its limited mass, or it would soon expend its
- supply of fuel.
-
- This suggests that there must be some mechanism through which the
- Sun replenishes its dwindling fuel supply.
-
- I would suggest that it does this by orbiting the galaxy,
- 'feeding' off the clouds and globules that pervade the Milky Way.
-
- The Sun's magnetic and gravitational capacity make for an
- efficient 'food foraging' mechanism. Both nebulae and Sun travel in
- the same direction about the galaxy, like cars traveling in the
- same direction on a highway.
-
- Although the Sun is unlikely to collide with the nebulae on a
- given trajectory, their mutual gravitational attraction will alter
- the Sun's course towards the cloud and the Sun will plunge into
- the nebula's hydrogen-rich interior.
-
- It is estimated that the Sun's magnetic influence reaches well
- beyond the planets of our solar system. When highly accelerated
- particles of the solar wind collide with the gas and dust of space,
- electrons and protons are knocked off from one another, thus making
- these particles within the Sun's heliosphere magnetically sensitive.
-
- This is somewhat similar to the static cling you get in a drier.
-
- The charged particle follows the magnetic fieldlines to the north or
- south pole of the Sun, depending on the polarity of the particle.
-
-
-
- Page 12
-
-
-
-
-
- The Sun's gravitational and magnetic fields are an effective means
- of sweeping the galactic plane for matter.
-
- We can see this effect on a smaller scale with our own planet when
- we watch the cascade of particles coming to Earth in the form of
- the Aurora Borealis.
-
- In the same way the Sun consumes the matter which is necessary for
- its continued existence.
-
- Our Sun is presently not in a nebula, and so it is not digesting
- much matter at the moment, but if you look at stars in these
- nebulae, you will see that they are in a highly energetic state.
-
- I suggest that this is due to the infalling matter which excites
- the surface of these suns. Many astronomers believe that the high
- energy state of suns in nebulae is due to their youth, and they
- point to the Hurtzsprung-Russell diagram as the proof of this.
-
- The Hurtzsprung-Russell diagram plots stars on a chart in order
- of their magnitude and temperature, and it is believed that this
- tells us something about the evolution of stars.
-
- Can we rely on such a diagram for evolutionary information?
- Consider this little story:
-
- An umpire is standing in a crowded stadium. Upon his nose is an
- intelligent wart. This wart desires to know the process of
- evolution of its host, namely the umpire.
-
- In order to aid itself in this quest, the wart observes the other
- people in the stadium. Although the wart cannot see, it is able to
- monitor heartbeats and blood pressure of people present.
-
- Armed with this information, the wart constructs a graph upon which
- it places the rate of hart beat and blood pressure of all the
- people in the stadium.
-
- The wart now mistakenly believes that by comparing people in this
- manner, it has acquired a system that displays a sequence of
- evolution from youth to old age.
-
- In reality, the graph displays no such information; it
- merely describes the momentary state of excitement of the people
- in the stadium. The same is true for stars in nebulae. Stars of any
- age burn hotter and brighter while feeding.
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- In 1979 I stayed in Chicago with a friend who had been kind enough
- to give me lodging while I was organizing an exhibition of my
- artwork.
-
- One evening, after a particularly strenuous day I took a long lazy
- soak in the bath. By chance I grabbed up an astronomy periodical
- which lay atop a stack of magazines which happened to contain
- pictures taken by the Voyager spacecraft which had recently passed
- through the Jovian system. Those images held me transfixed for
- hours, and the tub water was quite cold when I emerged from its
- primordial soup.
- Page 13
-
-
-
-
-
- Eight years later and after considerable reflection I still cannot
- dissect, much less put into any coherent order of thought, the
- process that led to the chrysalis which formed in my mind; I can
- only offer its fruits.
-
- These writings are an attempt to put the essence of that vision into
- a semblance of order.
-
- In the process of writing this paper I have come to realize that we
- live in an outrageously animated universe where nature's ingenuity
- is law.
-
- Within this cosm, no cohesive entity is allowed existence unless the
- efficiency of its structure has undergone nature's rigorous
- trials.
-
- If suns feed through the manipulation of electromagnetism and
- gravity, it would seem reasonable to assume that they would do so
- in the most efficient way possible.
-
- Consider natures 'invention' of the strawberry flower. This is an
- efficient device which allows for pollination and fruit.
-
- Pollination assures reproduction. The fruit which are derived from
- the pollinated flower are specifically designed for the survival of
- its offspring.
-
- The seeds that are imbedded on the surface of the strawberry pass
- unharmed through the animal digestive system. In this way the
- offspring are deposited in a rich compost, away from the parent
- plant thereby avoiding competition.
-
- I propose that it is the nature of suns exhibit the same measure
- of ingenuity.
-
- In space, mass is scarce and suns will have evolved in such a way
- as to take the greatest advantage of the mass that is available to
- them.
-
- Mass - from which gravity and electromagnetism are derived - are
- the tools with which suns seek their fuel. If suns can induce
- gravity - make more gravity than the corresponding quantity of
- mass allows - then they will have sought a way to do so, for it is
- the nature of all life-forms to seek an excellence of efficiency.
-
- The life-urge is a universal and little-understood force; it is
- the common thread which holds the microcosm to the macrocosm.
-
- I think it unlikely that this thin sheath we call a biosphere
- is unique in its essence; if we only choose to see, then
- manifestations of life are to be found on all scales of the cosm.
-
- Seasons repeat, galaxies spin, atoms oscillate.
-
- Mankind is often fooled into thinking of consistency as inanimate;
- a cup seems to be a cup from moment to moment, but why should it be
- the same cup? Is there any particular reason why we should believe
- an atom is the same atom after each oscillation?
-
-
- Page 14
-
-
-
-
-
- Can we maintain that a forest is the same forest from season
- to season?
-
- Nor is the consistency of an ocean's color a result of the
- inanimate; on the contrary, its color is a celebration of life.
-
- The 'unchanging' appearance of an oceans color and hue is net
- result of the countless micro-organisms in the process of living
- within its water.
-
- Why is it so hard for us as humans to see and comprehend a
- living universe?
-
- In our shells of being, we are trapped in our own time notion and
- it is only through insight, patience and study that the
- actions of smaller and larger cosms come to life for us.
-
-
- Humankind must resist falling prey to the vanity of uniqueness.
-
- The sum of our species has shown no more self determination than
- any other species; we mindlessly extract trapped carbon in the
- form of coal and oil and eject it into the Earths atmosphere.
-
- Is there purpose in this?
-
- How would we know if we refuse to even consider the Earth as a
- living entity of which we are an interacting part? We hurtle along,
- blinded by our lack of humility; if we refuse look about us in the
- midst of a living universe, how will we know oblivion even if we
- were rushing directly towards it?
-
-
- I suspect that the vast majority of copies of this paper will
- be thrown away without even being read. Some will be casually
- browsed through before they are discarded. However, through the
- sheer force of their numbers it is quite possible that a few -
- such as you dear reader - will actually have read the paper in
- its entirety.
-
- I fancy someday, someone will be tempted to perform the
- occultation experiment which I have described earlier in this
- paper. I suspect that this will happen sooner or later anyway,
- and If my vision is false, and neutrinos pass through the Sun
- unimpeded, then surely I have hurt or offended no one.
-
- However, if it holds the seeds of truth - that gravity is no slave
- to matter - where lie the limits of humankind's destiny, if we
- learn to understand and control the nature of its force?
-
- It is quite possible that no one will remember my prediction
- when verified, but that is of no consequence. The origin of an idea
- is of no importance; time bleaches the pages of history,
- names are eventually forgotten in the haze of time and no one is
- remembered for very long.
-
- I suspect Nietzsche is wrong when he writes that the only things
- remembered are written in blood and stone. Overall, humankinds
- collective memory is quite short and so it is only the concepts
-
- Page 15
-
-
-
-
-
- that become indispensable and fundamental to the survival of our
- species that ever remain through the rise and fall of cultures
- and in my conceit, it is here that I stake my claim.
-
- Man has no time but that river of dreams upon which he casts
- himself adrift.
-
- If you have any questions or comments, please direct them to me
- at:
-
- Stephen Goodfellow,
- 146 Farrand Park,
- Highland Park, MI 48023
- (313) 883-4827
-
- CREDITS
-
- I would like to thank the following people who have taken the time
- to correspond or talk with me.
-
- Walter Kauppila, Physics Professor at Wayne State University. Dr.
- Favro, W.S.U. Professor Chen, Professor of astronomy, W.S.U.
- Professor Teske, Physics, University of Michigan.
-
- Jim Thele, Electrical Technician at G.M. Greg Menovick,
- Mathematics, W.S.U. Professor Wadehra, University of Michigan.
-
- Professor Cowley, Physics & Astronomy, Wayne State University.
- Greenberg, Editor of Kronos Journal. Leslie Leifer, Chemistry,
- Mich. Tech, Univ. Special thanks to Dr. Raymond Davis of
- Brookhaven National Laboratory for his research.
-
- Thanks to my Brother, Justin Meilgaard, for helping me with
- this pamphlet.
-
- I also thank Bill Haus, Allan Franklin, Ralph Franklin, Janis
- Lewitt, Dennis Lamberis, Jackie Jablonski, for teaching me how to
- think.
-
- Special thanks to Lowell Boileau and Marvin Reili to whom I owe the
- existence of this paper, and who have taken the brunt of my 'off
- the wall' ideas with immeasurable patience.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 16
-
-
-
-
-
- REFERENCES
-
- (1) "Gravity" by George Gamow, Doubleday Publishers 1962, p.138
-
- (2) "Realm of the Universe" by George O. Abell, Saunders Pub.
- 1980. pp.285-86
-
- (3) The concept of neutrinos passing through the Sun is confirmed
- by conversation with Professor Wadehra from University of
- Michigan, dept. of Astrophysics (1/21/85) Prof. Wadehra also
- agreed that it is hypothetically possible to determine:
-
- (a) The source of a neutrino; the angle of neutrino approach
- can be determined by collision, and
-
- (b) A neutrino's energy level can be determined. (Hence a
- solar neutrino cannot be mistaken for a neutrino of a
- higher energy even though it originates from a star which
- is occulted by the Sun.)
-
- (4) See "Sun," Encyclopedia Britannica, 1980, vol.17, p.178.
-
- (5) Encyclopedia Britannica, "Science and the Future" Year
- Book, 1983; 'The phantom Neutrino' by James S. Trefil, p.224
-
- (6) News Notes, Sky & Telescope December issue, 1984 p.506
-
- (7) "Sunspots" 1979 by R. J. Bray and R. E. Loughhead.
- Dover Publications,p.4.
-
- (8) "Sensitive Chaos" by Theodor Schwenk, Schocken Books, New York,
- 1978 ; pp.44-45.
-
- (9) "The Key to the Universe" 1978 by Nigel Calder. Penguin Pub.
- New York, p.26.
-
- "Astrophysical Quantities" 1973 by C.W. Allen, 3rd ed.
- The Athlone Press, Univ. of London; p.265.
-
- (10) "Solid Clues" 1985 by Gerald Feinburg, Simon & Schuster pub.
- p.23
-
- (11) "The ABC of Plasma" Fusion Magazine, by Riemannian, Nov. 1978
-
- (12) "Dictionary of Science" 1986 Barnhart Books, p.502
-
- (13) "The ABC of Plasma" Fusion Magazine, by Riemannian,
- Nov.1978p.42.
-
- (14) "Realm of the Universe"1980 by George O. Abell, Saunders
- Publication p.222
-
- (15) "Design of the Universe" by Fritz Kahn, Klein Publishers,
- New York 1954 pp. 207-208.
-
- (16) Scientific American, Sept. 1985 "Helioseismology" (Article,)
- John W. Leibacher, Robers W. Noyes, Juri Toomre, Roger K.
- Ulrich; p.48-57.
-
-
- Page 17
-
-
-
-
-
- (17) "A New Sun" by John A. Eddy, NASA 1979 (SP-402); p.27.
-
- (18) See (15); p.56.
-
- (19) Encyclopedia Britannica 1980 vol.5, 'Ear,'pp. 1120-1131.
- Also: "The Body" 1985 Anthony Smith, Pelican Books, 'The Ear.'
-
- (20) Encyclopedia Britannica 1980 vol.1, 'Heavier-than-air
- craft,' pp.372-383
-
- (21) "Gravity" by George Gamow, Doubleday Publishers 1962,
- p.118
-
- (22) Encyclopedia Britannica 1980 vol. 9, 'Hurricanes and
- Typhoons' p.63
-
- Scientific American 1964 vol.211, 'Experiments in
- Hurricane Modification' by R.H. Simpson and Joanne S. Malkus,
- pp.27-37
-
- (23) "Principles of Cosmology" 1978, by Michael Berry, Cambridge
- Univ. Press, London; p.17.
-
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