6. Zero Point Energy and its implications
This portion is also not yet complete. What is ZPE?
The decelerating speed of light
Since the speed of light is slowing down, there are some real surprises. Among other things, it means we have no idea how long the past was. The 13.5 billion year old universe may be only a few thousand years old. Imagine a train that is coming into your train depot at San Francisco from New York at 1 mile per hour. You would think that it had been traveling for months or even years. But now imagine that you discovered that when it left New York it was traveling at a TRILLION miles per hour and is gradually slowing down. Now, how long has it been traveling? Minutes, or hours? The universe may indeed be only a few thousand years old. We are not necessarily as bright as we think we are. Opinions so often in their conceit obscure the truth.
A Decelerating Speed of Light
Daniel Gregg - Local facts about the speed of light have been swept under the rug. First there is a statistically valid decrease in the speed of light, starting from its original measurement's in the 1600's. This is explained by creation scientist Barry Setterfield, mathematician Alan Montgomery, and Physicist Lambert Dolphin. This discovery began with Setterfield's landmark paper: The Atomic Constants, Light and Time. It demonstrates a significant trend in the historical measurement data toward of a decreasing speed of light. See the History of the speed of light by Helen Setterfield.
With the invention of the atomic clock scientists stopped measuring light speed with orbital clocks. (An orbital clock is one based on the movement of the sun, moon, or stars, and depends on the speed of gravity, which is much faster than light. ( ). Because they stopped using orbital clocks, experimenters were no longer able to detect changes in the speed of light. It is also known that the speed of gravity is much greater than the speed of light. The relativistic cult denies this, but it has been conclusively proven that gravitational systems are unstable without a speed of gravity many orders of magnitude above that of light. Professional astronomer Thomas Van Flandern explains that the Speed of Gravity is at least 10 orders of magnitude above that of light in is paper, The Speed of Gravity What the Experiments Say. The relativists do not like these results, because their dogma dictates that the local speed of light must be the ultimate speed limit of all information in the universe.
Setterfield's graph below shows how several curves might be fit to the historical measurements of the speed of light, showing a significant trend to decrease. Due to size constraints, it is placed sideways.
The decelerating speed of light
Since the speed of light is slowing down, there are some real surprises. Among other things, it means we have no idea how long the past was. The 13.5 billion year old universe may be only a few thousand years old. Imagine a train that is coming into your train depot at San Francisco from New York at 1 mile per hour. You would think that it had been traveling for months or even years. But now imagine that you discovered that when it left New York it was traveling at a TRILLION miles per hour and is gradually slowing down. Now, how long has it been traveling? Minutes, or hours? The universe may indeed be only a few thousand years old. We are not necessarily as bright as we think we are. Opinions so often in their conceit obscure the truth.
A Decelerating Speed of Light
Daniel Gregg - Local facts about the speed of light have been swept under the rug. First there is a statistically valid decrease in the speed of light, starting from its original measurement's in the 1600's. This is explained by creation scientist Barry Setterfield, mathematician Alan Montgomery, and Physicist Lambert Dolphin. This discovery began with Setterfield's landmark paper: The Atomic Constants, Light and Time. It demonstrates a significant trend in the historical measurement data toward of a decreasing speed of light. See the History of the speed of light by Helen Setterfield.
With the invention of the atomic clock scientists stopped measuring light speed with orbital clocks. (An orbital clock is one based on the movement of the sun, moon, or stars, and depends on the speed of gravity, which is much faster than light. ( ). Because they stopped using orbital clocks, experimenters were no longer able to detect changes in the speed of light. It is also known that the speed of gravity is much greater than the speed of light. The relativistic cult denies this, but it has been conclusively proven that gravitational systems are unstable without a speed of gravity many orders of magnitude above that of light. Professional astronomer Thomas Van Flandern explains that the Speed of Gravity is at least 10 orders of magnitude above that of light in is paper, The Speed of Gravity What the Experiments Say. The relativists do not like these results, because their dogma dictates that the local speed of light must be the ultimate speed limit of all information in the universe.
Setterfield's graph below shows how several curves might be fit to the historical measurements of the speed of light, showing a significant trend to decrease. Due to size constraints, it is placed sideways.