• Re: Galaxies don't fly apart because their entire frame is rotating

    From The Starmaker@21:1/5 to Ross Finlayson on Sat Apr 6 12:08:35 2024
    XPost: sci.physics.relativity

    Ross Finlayson wrote:

    On 04/05/2024 11:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
    Ross Finlayson wrote:

    On 04/05/2024 01:20 AM, Mikko wrote:
    On 2024-04-05 07:38:56 +0000, Thomas Heger said:

    Am 31.03.2024 um 10:49 schrieb Mikko:

    They noticed that the rotational speed of stars in most galaxies >>>>>>> cannot be explained by gravitation if you only take into account >>>>>>> the mass of the visible part of them. There is nothing silly in >>>>>>> trying to sort that out.



    I try to explain rotating galaxy vortices by foreground rotation of >>>>>> the frame of reference of the observer.

    In this case a vortex is actually a structure of significant depth, >>>>>> where stars are stacked in distance, hence also 'stacked in time' (in >>>>>> the image).

    Why would you want to explain someting that is never seen?

    Theoretical physics does not require visibility.

    Study of phantasies is not physics of any kind.

    Interesting are phenomenons which exist, whether they are visible or not.

    They are interesting only if they are observed to exist or there is
    a good reason to expect that they can be observed.

    E.g. a ship on the other side of the planet cannot be seen from here >>>> or the other side of the Moon.

    Both can be seen.

    But both do exist.

    Visibility, usefulness or other categories of this kind, which reflect >>>> a connection to the observer, are irrelevant in physics.

    Everything in physics has a connection to an observer.


    It's the philosophy of science that falsifiability requires this
    sort of observable physically, yes.

    This then involves the observation, sampling, measurement: "effects",
    particularly with regards to where they do and don't interfere with
    the sampling, or, active and passive sampling, or where the "effects"
    actually involve super-classical effects like quantum effects and
    the notion of the pilot wave, or Bohm - de Broglie and real wave
    collapse above and about the stochastic interpretation.

    So, there's a notion that the senses stop a the sensory, the
    phenomenological, while reason and its attachments actually
    begin in the noumenal, about the noumena and the noumenon.
    Where do they meet? The idea is that humans and other reasoners
    have an object sense, a word sense, a number sense, a time sense,
    and a sense of the continuum, connecting the phenomenological and
    the noumenol, with regards to observables.

    Of course, no-one's ever seen an "atom".

    What about Erwin Muller? isn't he der furst tu see an atom??





    It's kind of like one time sometime asked Einstein, "are atoms real?",
    and he said something like, "yeah, you know, there are reasons why
    it's really just a concession to the notion that in the theory
    there's mathematics and the vanishing and infinitesimal, and of
    course it relates to all the antique and historical theories of
    the atomism or what we call Democritan atomism, and, chemistry
    arrives at stoichiometry or perfect proportions with regards to
    quantities of masses of chemical elements, then what we have is
    electron physics, about specifically the discreteness of the
    energies, which we sort of need because otherwise mathematics
    runs over, so we got electron physics, then there's Avogadro's
    number, or about 9.022*10^23 many atoms per mole, and we got
    stuff going on about Angstroms five above and Planck five below,
    the orders of magnitude of the size of these theoretical particles,
    yet it's still just an conceit to the theory of particles, and
    then though we know there's particle/wave duality, so on the
    one hand it's just to give people the idea that there are simple
    finite quantities, even in the atomic scale, yet otherwise it's
    still a conceit, so, ..., yeah, sure, atoms are real".

    It might help if you know that NIST CODATA prints a table of
    the fundamental physical constants, and, every few years
    they've gotten smaller, not just more precise yet smaller,
    it's called "running constants", and helps explain how a
    theory of atomism and discrete particles works just great,
    when really it's a continuum mechanics.


    Translation: Erwin Muller wasn't a Jewish scientist, so he's not suppose
    to be known for seeing the atom.


    dat explains Why 6 million jewish people were subject to genocide...

    besides being a stone in everyones shoe.






    --
    The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
    to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable,
    and challenge the unchallengeable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Starmaker@21:1/5 to Ross Finlayson on Sun Apr 7 12:43:35 2024
    XPost: sci.physics.relativity

    Ross Finlayson wrote:

    On 04/06/2024 12:08 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
    Ross Finlayson wrote:

    On 04/05/2024 11:04 PM, The Starmaker wrote:
    Ross Finlayson wrote:

    On 04/05/2024 01:20 AM, Mikko wrote:
    On 2024-04-05 07:38:56 +0000, Thomas Heger said:

    Am 31.03.2024 um 10:49 schrieb Mikko:

    They noticed that the rotational speed of stars in most galaxies >>>>>>>>> cannot be explained by gravitation if you only take into account >>>>>>>>> the mass of the visible part of them. There is nothing silly in >>>>>>>>> trying to sort that out.



    I try to explain rotating galaxy vortices by foreground rotation of >>>>>>>> the frame of reference of the observer.

    In this case a vortex is actually a structure of significant depth, >>>>>>>> where stars are stacked in distance, hence also 'stacked in time' (in
    the image).

    Why would you want to explain someting that is never seen?

    Theoretical physics does not require visibility.

    Study of phantasies is not physics of any kind.

    Interesting are phenomenons which exist, whether they are visible or not.

    They are interesting only if they are observed to exist or there is >>>>> a good reason to expect that they can be observed.

    E.g. a ship on the other side of the planet cannot be seen from here >>>>>> or the other side of the Moon.

    Both can be seen.

    But both do exist.

    Visibility, usefulness or other categories of this kind, which reflect >>>>>> a connection to the observer, are irrelevant in physics.

    Everything in physics has a connection to an observer.


    It's the philosophy of science that falsifiability requires this
    sort of observable physically, yes.

    This then involves the observation, sampling, measurement: "effects", >>>> particularly with regards to where they do and don't interfere with
    the sampling, or, active and passive sampling, or where the "effects" >>>> actually involve super-classical effects like quantum effects and
    the notion of the pilot wave, or Bohm - de Broglie and real wave
    collapse above and about the stochastic interpretation.

    So, there's a notion that the senses stop a the sensory, the
    phenomenological, while reason and its attachments actually
    begin in the noumenal, about the noumena and the noumenon.
    Where do they meet? The idea is that humans and other reasoners
    have an object sense, a word sense, a number sense, a time sense,
    and a sense of the continuum, connecting the phenomenological and
    the noumenol, with regards to observables.

    Of course, no-one's ever seen an "atom".

    What about Erwin Muller? isn't he der furst tu see an atom??





    It's kind of like one time sometime asked Einstein, "are atoms real?",
    and he said something like, "yeah, you know, there are reasons why
    it's really just a concession to the notion that in the theory
    there's mathematics and the vanishing and infinitesimal, and of
    course it relates to all the antique and historical theories of
    the atomism or what we call Democritan atomism, and, chemistry
    arrives at stoichiometry or perfect proportions with regards to
    quantities of masses of chemical elements, then what we have is
    electron physics, about specifically the discreteness of the
    energies, which we sort of need because otherwise mathematics
    runs over, so we got electron physics, then there's Avogadro's
    number, or about 9.022*10^23 many atoms per mole, and we got
    stuff going on about Angstroms five above and Planck five below,
    the orders of magnitude of the size of these theoretical particles,
    yet it's still just an conceit to the theory of particles, and
    then though we know there's particle/wave duality, so on the
    one hand it's just to give people the idea that there are simple
    finite quantities, even in the atomic scale, yet otherwise it's
    still a conceit, so, ..., yeah, sure, atoms are real".

    It might help if you know that NIST CODATA prints a table of
    the fundamental physical constants, and, every few years
    they've gotten smaller, not just more precise yet smaller,
    it's called "running constants", and helps explain how a
    theory of atomism and discrete particles works just great,
    when really it's a continuum mechanics.


    Translation: Erwin Muller wasn't a Jewish scientist, so he's not suppose
    to be known for seeing the atom.


    dat explains Why 6 million jewish people were subject to genocide...

    besides being a stone in everyones shoe.







    One does not simply _invoke_ Godwin's law, ....

    Godwin is a fraud, his fake law is a fraud. And he's a Democrat! and his
    wife is a Chink.

    The law is, there is no law.


    People with the word "God" in their name tend to think...they are God!


    I heard girls from Cambodia are hot.


    How old is his wife...13?


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQOuoUaSxKQ







    --
    The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
    to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable,
    and challenge the unchallengeable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Starmaker@21:1/5 to The Starmaker on Sun Apr 7 19:35:29 2024
    XPost: sci.physics.relativity, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    The Starmaker wrote:


    One does not simply _invoke_ Godwin's law, ....

    Godwin is a fraud, his fake law is a fraud. And he's a Democrat! and his
    wife is a Chink.

    The law is, there is no law.

    People with the word "God" in their name tend to think...they are God!

    I heard girls from Cambodia are hot.

    How old is his wife...13?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQOuoUaSxKQ





    Godwin's law inventor has a Cambodia wife...


    anybody here has a Cambodia wife???


    You need to go to Cambodia to find one..


    dats where older white men go to find young girls..and marry them!


    Cambodia, Thailand, Bangkok...not japan, china or korea.





    Cambodia, Thailand, Bangkok is where older white men find prositues to
    marry.

    Why else would Mike Godwin be doing with a Cambodia wife?

    in 20 years he be dead and she will be 33.


    me love you lonng time!




    --
    The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
    to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable,
    and challenge the unchallengeable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From The Starmaker@21:1/5 to Chris M. Thomasson on Sat Apr 13 11:09:27 2024
    XPost: sci.physics.relativity

    Chris M. Thomasson wrote:

    On 4/12/2024 1:50 PM, Chris M. Thomasson wrote:
    On 4/11/2024 10:45 PM, Thomas Heger wrote:

    [...]

    To measure the position of a star in one billion light years distance
    you need to wait a billion years, before you can actually see the
    light emitted from that star.

    Because that is impossible, we simply don't know to were those stars
    went in the meantime.

    Think of taking a look at a star A that is say, 100 light years from
    Earth. Now, look at some other stars around it and try to create a
    little map. Okay, now jump to the star A right now. Well, that star is
    most likely to be in a radically different place, or even dead via supernova we have had a chance to detect yet. The map is going to be
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

    star A has turned into dark matter. Where do you think dark matter comes from? a black hole...very dark hole.

    Dark matter is the ocean of the universe.


    Only less than 5 percent of matter floats on the universe ocean.


    The same it is here where i live on earth. 97 percent of the earth is..wet matter.


    Dark matter
    is wet.


    You just happen to be inside a
    very samll air bubble.

    The rest is...wet.


    Now, the question is..."What is wet?"
















    --
    The Starmaker -- To question the unquestionable, ask the unaskable,
    to think the unthinkable, mention the unmentionable, say the unsayable,
    and challenge the unchallengeable.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)