View Single Post
  #3  
Old November 21st 03, 12:04 PM
Lyndon Ashmore
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Greetings,
How do you know that your paradox will occur? Either you or Mars may not be
here in 4 years time (though I truly hope you both are). My paradox is
happening now.
Also apart from yourself and the rottation of Mars both being in a spin,
they are not related.Consider this:
Just forget, for a moment, what these Big Bang Codsmologists have been
telling us and lets look what the experimental evidence says.
The Hubble constant is found by measuring the redshift in light from distant
galaxies.
The redshift is found by measuring the shift in absorption lines in the
spectra of this light.
These absorption lines are caused by electrons in atoms in the space around
stars etc. taking this light and absorbing photons of certain energies.
The energy of these absorbed photons is proportional to their frequency and
the constant of proportionality is the planck constant.
Ashmore's paradox tells us that measured values of H are exactly equal to
the (planck constant)x(radius of electron)/(mass of electron) in each cubic
metre of space.
Where do all these bangs and expansions come into it?

"Painius" wrote in message
...
"Lyndon Ashmore" wrote...
in message ...

Ashmore's Paradox. 14/11/03
I would like to post a result that was thrown up in my research.
Why is the Hubble constant the same as 'hr/m per cubic metre of space'?
For each cubic metre of space, take the planck constant, multiply it by

the
classical radius of the electron then divide by the rest mass of the
electron.
This gives you 2.1exp(-18) per sec.
Change this to astronomical units and you get 64 km/sec per megaparsec -

the
Hubble constant as measured by Reiss, Press, Kirshner in 1996.
In Kirshner's book 'The Extravagant Universe' he says that all recent

values
of H lie in the range 70 +/- 7 km/s per Mpc. Thus, all values of H lie

in
the range (1.1 +/- 0.1) hr/m per unit metre of space.
If this is pure coincidence then it a very remarkable one indeed.
For more information visit my website at www.lyndonashmore.com


'Lo Lyndon --

Actually, it's not even much of a coincidence is it? We all
tend to age, to grow older. And as we grow older our ages
coincide with other figures. For example, i recently turned
54 (yes, thanks, folks, for the nice thoughts). Now, in about
4½ years or so, my age in years will coincide with Mercury's
rotational period in days!

As you mention at www.lyndonashmore.com the Hubble
Time is the reciprocal of the Hubble Constant. And the
Hubble Time, the age of the Universe, is always getting
older. If the electron has a rest mass, m, then i doubt that
it changes much. And if it has a radius, r, then that most
likely stays the same as well. The Planck constant, h? It
*is* a constant, after all. To me this means that there was
a time when your paradox had not yet happened, and there
will come a time when it will no longer be.

And like the coincidence that will take place in 4½ years
between my age and Mercury's spin period, it has only a
passing, fleeting significance...

...doesn't it?

happy days and...
starry starry nights!

--
Your heart up hanging on the wall
Just dripping tears so painfully,
You ne'er felt love so true as mine,
I want your heart inside me.

Protected from all manner, form
And shape of harm it will e'er be,
If you say no, I fade and die,
I need your heart inside me.

Paine Ellsworth