Sunday, November 6, 2011

No two gravitons are identical

The Forces of Nature by Kelland Terry, Ph.D.
The Virgin River has two major tributaries. One fork flows through Zion National Park from the mountains north of Zion. At flood stage it tends to be a muddy white color. The other fork joins this stream a few miles south of Zion and a few miles north of Rockville. It flows from mountains south of Zion. At flood stage the river in this fork tends to be a muddy red color. During some floods, the water that rages through Rockville is muddy red on the south side of the river and muddy white on the north side of the river. As the flood continues the portion of red to white changes as the storm shifts its position. Let’s see how this might relate to gravitons.

My model for the electron string cycle has the graviton being ejected into space from a point near the center of the two spheres that make up the electron. This means the virtual particle that is to become a graviton may be composed of s-goo and n-goo to varying degrees. When the virtual particle is ejected into space, the graviton string that develops is composed of both materials. I also believe that the composition of this material is not uniform along the length of the string, much like the Virgin River at flood stage. This means every graviton is different from every other graviton. Because all gravitons have the same mass, but varying composition they do not bond and cause a force of repulsion, nor do they bond and cause a force of attraction. Kelland—www.vestheory.com
Kelland—www.vestheory.com

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