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I hereby announce the publication of my E-paper showing how most variable star
phenomena, even aspects of pulsars, is explainable on the grounds that light speed is source dependent. It shows that earlier criticisms of the ballistic theory, based on binary star observations, are wrong. For illustrative purposes, the paper is written as a Visual Basic .exe program. (This will undoubtedly become the most effective way to publish scientific papers in the future). The program is 184,320 bytes and takes only a few seconds to download or run from site. It is quite complex and comprehensive, having taken many months to compile. It is also accurate. A good computer using microsoft windows is recommended. The program is published on my website at www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/variablestars.exe It can do in seconds what De Sitter would have taken thousands of years to achieve. It contains no viruses and cannot harm your computer. Instructions are provided in the program. I particularly invite both Paul Andersen and Androcles to referee the paper. Henry Wilson 9/03/04 Henri Wilson. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm |
#2
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Dear HenriWilson:
"HenriWilson" wrote in message ... .... For illustrative purposes, the paper is written as a Visual Basic .exe program. (This will undoubtedly become the most effective way to publish scientific papers in the future). The program is 184,320 bytes and takes only a few seconds to download or run from site. It is quite complex and comprehensive, having taken many months to compile. It is also accurate. A good computer using microsoft windows is recommended. There is the problem with your asserton, HenriWilson. Most of those that review papers, review the underlying mathematics and assumptions. Many of those that review papers will have nothing to do with MicroShaft Windoze. And finally, many who review papers, do so in a sequence that suits their needs and not the programmer's whim. Reveal the source, or quit wasting "breath". I have an entire tax program that is smaller than your "revelation", and it maintains two datafiles, two indexes, and all the financial data of a host of people. But then, that is DOS for you (and originally developed on CP/M)... David A. Smith |
#3
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On Mon, 8 Mar 2004 17:15:38 -0700, "N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\)" N: dlzc1
D:cox wrote: Dear HenriWilson: "HenriWilson" wrote in message .. . ... For illustrative purposes, the paper is written as a Visual Basic .exe program. (This will undoubtedly become the most effective way to publish scientific papers in the future). The program is 184,320 bytes and takes only a few seconds to download or run from site. It is quite complex and comprehensive, having taken many months to compile. It is also accurate. A good computer using microsoft windows is recommended. There is the problem with your asserton, HenriWilson. Most of those that review papers, review the underlying mathematics and assumptions. Many of those that review papers will have nothing to do with MicroShaft Windoze. And finally, many who review papers, do so in a sequence that suits their needs and not the programmer's whim. Reveal the source, or quit wasting "breath". I have an entire tax program that is smaller than your "revelation", and it maintains two datafiles, two indexes, and all the financial data of a host of people. But then, that is DOS for you (and originally developed on CP/M)... My programming does not involve easy stuff like sorting data files. Scientific papers cannot be published effectively without animations. Traditional journals are filled with crap, written purely for promotion purposes. Remember the saying 'publish or perish'. This paper is written simply to broadcast the truth. You can make a few calculations by hand if you want to check some of the findings. The source wouldn't mean much to anyone but I can give you the basic equations if you want them. David A. Smith Henri Wilson. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm |
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Runtime error 53
Androcles |
#5
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On Tue, 9 Mar 2004 01:05:04 -0000, "Androcles"
wrote: Runtime error 53 Androcles Bugger. What is error 53 I wonder? It runs OK on mine. Windows XP and 256K ram. You should upgrade. You would love it. It shows that vitually all variable star behavior is caused by source dependency. Knocks relativity for six! Henri Wilson. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm |
#6
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HenriWilson wrote:
I hereby announce the publication of my E-paper showing how most variable star phenomena, even aspects of pulsars, is explainable on the grounds that light speed is source dependent. [snip] Dead on arrival. Science 303(5661) 1143;1153 (2004) http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0401086 http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0312071 Deeply relativistic neutron star binaries Everything works by the book - not your idiot book, Henri - to the extreme limits of experimental error. http://rattler.cameron.edu/EMIS/journals/LRG/Articles/Volume4/2001-4will/index.html Experimental constraints on General Relativity. http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/ptti/ptti2002/paper20.pdf Nature 425 374 (2003) http://rattler.cameron.edu/EMIS/journals/LRG/Articles/Volume6/2003-1ashby/index.html http://www.eftaylor.com/pub/projecta.pdf Relativity in the GPS system -- Uncle Al http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/qz.pdf http://www.mazepath.com/uncleal/eotvos.htm (Do something naughty to physics) |
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snip
My god, what an unholy piece of ****. I have never seen the entire visible color spectrum merged so unsucessfully with blinking lines. Your 'e paper' it a piece of ****. I only ran it because this computer is a univ machine. Where is the source? Prove to me a backdoor was not just installed on this machine. Oh and by the way, diagrams are not proof. |
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On Mon, 08 Mar 2004 17:56:22 -0800, Uncle Al wrote:
HenriWilson wrote: I hereby announce the publication of my E-paper showing how most variable star phenomena, even aspects of pulsars, is explainable on the grounds that light speed is source dependent. [snip] Dead on arrival. Science 303(5661) 1143;1153 (2004) http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0401086 http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0312071 Deeply relativistic neutron star binaries Everything works by the book - not your idiot book, Henri - to the extreme limits of experimental error. http://rattler.cameron.edu/EMIS/journals/LRG/Articles/Volume4/2001-4will/index.html Experimental constraints on General Relativity. http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/ptti/ptti2002/paper20.pdf Nature 425 374 (2003) http://rattler.cameron.edu/EMIS/journals/LRG/Articles/Volume6/2003-1ashby/index.html http://www.eftaylor.com/pub/projecta.pdf Relativity in the GPS system **** off you pathetic cretin. Henri Wilson. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm |
#10
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On 9 Mar 2004 00:51:52 -0800, (Eric Gisse) wrote:
snip My god, what an unholy piece of ****. I have never seen the entire visible color spectrum merged so unsucessfully with blinking lines. Your 'e paper' it a piece of ****. I only ran it because this computer is a univ machine. Where is the source? Prove to me a backdoor was not just installed on this machine. Oh and by the way, diagrams are not proof. Afraid of the truth eh? There is no doubt, source dependency explains all the mystery that surounds variable stars... even pulsars. Light from the concave section of an orbit is concentrated at certain distances as the faster c+v light catches up to the slower c-v. The brightness patterns observed from all variable stars is easily simulated with source dependency models. The time scales of orbiting stars are condensed and focussed at certain predictable distances. So are you plain stupid? Don't you want to learn any new physics? It's all there in my program for the world to see. Goodbye Einstein! Henri Wilson. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm |
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