Monday, December 19, 2011

Our solar system in review

The Forces of Nature by Kelland Terry, Ph.D.

I have in this section shown how elastic string theory can be used to explain common observations in our solar system. Gravitons have their effect because of three important features:
• They have physical properties; i.e., they have mass.
• They remain bound to the particles that create them.
• Finally, there is a vast concentration of gravitons emanating from central bodies, such as our Sun.

These features lead to the following conclusions:
• Gravitons couple the spin of a planet to its orbital motion about the Sun. Earth spins in the same direction it orbits as it collides and spins against the Sun’s gravitons in its path. Venus has the slowest spin rate of all the planets because Venus spins in the opposite direction that it rotates. Venus is slowly being forced to spin in the opposite direction.
• Gravitons physically connect satellites to central bodies. Because Earth spins on its axis, it drags the Moon forward much like a gyrating human body drags a hula hoop. This physically transfers Earth’s momentum to the Moon in the same manner that the human body transfers its energy to the hula hoop. The Moon is moving away from us as it gains momentum and Earth’s days grow correspondingly longer. Triton rotates around Neptune in the opposite direction that Neptune spins. Triton is being forced to migrate inward towards Neptune at a noticeable rate.
• A dense matrix of gravitons causes repulsion forces between Sun and planet. Repulsion is dependent upon graviton concentration and the angles taken by an orbiting planet. Repulsion decreases faster than gravitational attraction as the distance between two bodies increase because both of these factors decrease with distance.
• Because the ratio of repulsion force versus force of attraction decreases with distance from Sun, it completely explains Mercury’s precession thought due to relativity.
• The interaction of repulsion forces and the force of gravitation coupled with the planet’s equatorial bulge causes Earth and other planets to tilt on their axes.
• Because the ratio of repulsion force to the force of attraction decreases faster with distance from the Sun, it causes tilt to increase with distance, and it explains Earth’s annual (actually semiannual) polar wobble on axis.
Kelland—www.vestheory.com

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