Reign1
13th June 2008 - 01:40 AM
Could the expansion of space/time which must travel at least the speed of light be directly responsible for gravity? Energy forms like light and radiation travel closer to the speed of expansion so they cause less of an effect on the expanding space/time. While mass moves at a much slower speed causing drag on the expansion and creating bunches in the fabric of space/time which becomes gravity. This might also explain acceleration, as the mass of the universe slowly begins to move faster inching ever closer to the speed of expansion.
Harry Costas
14th June 2008 - 04:28 AM
Hello Reign1
Gravity although we feel it, we do not really understand it.
Some think it travels at the speed of light others think that it travels at 20 times C.
If you look at gravity via the wave structure of matter. Everything becomes but of the wave structrure and are united by some form of gravitons.
I will try to come back to this.
Got to go.
Montec
14th June 2008 - 05:04 PM
Hello Reign1, et al.
I'll quote from this
thread.
QUOTE
I can only state some facts and let you decide if they fit your model.
Everywhere on the Earth, at sea level, atomic clocks tick at the same rate.
The Earth is not a sphere. The polar radii is approximately 22 km less than the equatorial radii.
Water flows down hill (from a faster time rate to a slower time rate).