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Star sprinkler, the black hole, thoughts about the how and why.
Released Tue Jan 27 15:33:28 CET 2009 Not For Parrots.
Many times in nature things are exactly the opposite as status quo science proposes. Here I will propose an extension to a different view I came to believe in. Here is the beginning of that story: http://metaresearch.org/msgboard/top...?TOPIC_ID=1271 So, if we assume a Le Sage type of gravity, where the Le Sage particles originate in the black holes in the centre of galaxies, then there must be an area around the black hole where the force originating in it, is in balance with the force exercised by all other Le Sage particles originating from all other black holes in the other galaxies. This a *zero gravity* but *maximal pressure* area. In SUCH an area, the ideal conditions for compressing mass to form stars would be present |||nowhere else|||. The area around the black hole then becomes the star birth area, and any rotation of mass in that area would sling mass (stars basically) outwards, to build the spiral arms of the galaxies (later). These pictures show that in all glory: http://www.solstation.com/x-objects/cenbulge.htm Ever seen a garden sprinkler? Copyright Jan Panteltje 2009 all rights reserved. |
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Star sprinkler, the black hole, thoughts about the how and why.
On Jan 27, 8:36 am, Jan Panteltje wrote:
Released Tue Jan 27 15:33:28 CET 2009 Not For Parrots. Many times in nature things are exactly the opposite as status quo science proposes. Here I will propose an extension to a different view I came to believe in. Here is the beginning of that story: http://metaresearch.org/msgboard/top...?TOPIC_ID=1271 So, if we assume a Le Sage type of gravity, where the Le Sage particles originate in the black holes in the centre of galaxies, then there must be an area around the black hole where the force originating in it, is in balance with the force exercised by all other Le Sage particles originating from all other black holes in the other galaxies. This a *zero gravity* but *maximal pressure* area. In SUCH an area, the ideal conditions for compressing mass to form stars would be present |||nowhere else|||. The area around the black hole then becomes the star birth area, and any rotation of mass in that area would sling mass (stars basically) outwards, to build the spiral arms of the galaxies (later). These pictures show that in all glory: http://www.solstation.com/x-objects/cenbulge.htm Ever seen a garden sprinkler? Copyright Jan Panteltje 2009 all rights reserved. OK, pressure from each black hole creates a lesage-type gravity. But perhaps each hole does not radiate spherically- perhaps the jets of each galaxy, which arise at 90 degrees to the rotation of the galactic disc, send a stream of lesage particles in that direction. You'll notice none of the galaxies' stars are in that direction. So now you have an infinite number of sprinklers pushing on matter everywhere. But the big sprinkler, that arising at the center of the Milky Way, is going to stir the most stuff up as it sweeps through (as the galaxy precesses). john |
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