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Old January 8th 20, 01:07 AM posted to sci.astro
Pentcho Valev
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Default LIGO's Gravitational Waves: Climax of Einstein Fraud

"On 8:41 am EDT August 17, 2017, LIGO detected a new gravitational wave source, dubbed GW170817 to mark its discovery date. Just two seconds later NASA's Fermi satellite detected a weak pulse of gamma rays from the same location of the sky." https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/news/2017-30

A self-evident fake. "Same location" implies that gravitational waves don't move in a straight line to Earth but absurdly follow the path of (deflected) gamma rays:

https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qim...c53af5ba9.webp

Given the 2017 "same location" fake, any subsequent neutron-star-collision scenario involves an insoluble dilemma:

If "same location" is reconfirmed, LIGO conspirators will have to explain why gravitational waves coming straight to Earth somehow vanish in massive objects and only those strictly following the curvy path of the gamma rays gloriously reach LIGO's detectors. Hopeless business - the conclusion that LIGO conspirators fake gravitational waves will be more than obvious.

If "same location" is abandoned and gravitational waves and optical signals start coming from different directions, LIGO conspirators will have to explain how "same location" occurred in 2017 - again, the conclusion that gravitational waves are faked will be more than obvious.

As can be expected, the "same location" insoluble dilemma has been carefully avoided since the GW170817 fake:

"But one of LIGO's twin detectors was offline Thursday when the gravitational wave reached Earth, making it hard for astronomers to triangulate exactly where the signal was coming from. That sent astronomers racing to image as many galaxies as they could across a region covering one-quarter of the sky." http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/d-...n-star-merger/

"In this case, unlike many others, LIGO and Virgo were unable to significantly narrow down the direction in the sky that the waves came from. The researchers could say only that the waves were from a wide region that covers roughly one-quarter of the sky." https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-01377-2

"You might wonder why we haven't seen knockout detections of electromagnetic radiation accompanying gravitational waves since the August 2017 discovery. Unfortunately, we probably just got lucky that time. “It was nearby, well-localized in space, and had everything going for it,” Berger said." https://gizmodo.com/mystery-deepens-...ace-1837581646

"The first such observation, which took place in August of 2017, made history for being the first time that both gravitational waves and light were detected from the same cosmic event. The April 25 merger, by contrast, did not result in any light being detected." https://phys.org/news/2020-01-ligo-v...tron-star.html

Pentcho Valev