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Gravity wave Detectors ???



 
 
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Old August 2nd 07, 03:04 PM posted to alt.astronomy
G=EMC^2 Glazier[_1_]
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Default Gravity wave Detectors ???

I won't be around to hear people say I was right. sad but true The year
is now 2018 and LISA is in space trying to detect gravity waves,and as
I predicted here did not detect any. We are still going with the rubber
sheet (two dimensional thinking at best) We still have the crazy
analogy of space waves like waves on a pond. Reality is even when a
giant supernova explodes,and they supposedly give off great gravity
waves we will never detect them. The only way gravity can be
detected would be if a black hole came into existence instantly at a
distance from here to the moon. That is impossible. To detect gravity
waves is just as impossible. Reason is it has no detectable wave. It
has no field. It is a negative energy force. It relates only to
accelerating motion. To study inertia is to study gravity. That is
what Einstein and I talked about. bert

 




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