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Old April 26th 19, 11:50 AM posted to sci.astro
Pentcho Valev
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Default LIGO Godfathers Fake (Don't Detect) Gravitational Waves

"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

"The same location" is absurd. Gamma rays undergo gravitational deflection - "the same location" implies that gravitational waves are deflected in exactly the same way, which is nonsense. LIGO godfathers were quite careless in 2017 - they shouldn't have faked neutron-star-collision gravitational waves. The second "discovery" of such waves involves an awful dilemma, thanks to "the same location" fabricated in 2017:

1. If "the same location" is reconfirmed, LIGO godfathers will have to explain why gravitational waves undergo exactly the same gravitational deflection as light signals, and the fraud (LIGO godfathers FAKE gravitational waves) will be obvious.

2. If "the same location" is abandoned, LIGO godfathers will have to explain how "the same location" occurred in the first "discovery", and the fraud will be obvious again.

LIGO godfathers have just announced the second "discovery", pretending they have been unable to determine the location:

"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/

No triumph can be seen on the Internet - almost complete silence surrounds LIGO's second "discovery". Things are more than clear:

LIGO godfathers don't detect gravitational waves - they FAKE them.

Pentcho Valev