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Dark energy makes up approximately 68% of the universe and appears to be associated with the vacuum in space. It is distributed evenly throughout the universe,
Quote from: Thebox on 03/11/2017 15:03:35Quote from: The Spoon on 03/11/2017 14:58:14 This is known as trying to blag it.Of course, I am trying to blag it and be a fake scientist, however I do understand in my own head what the maths stands for. Hf is the normal representation of high frequency and S is normally entropy , the surface/volume of a sphere is standard maths and the greater than and less than signs are standard. I had already worked out before that :Kmax = at the speed of light c. So by blagging it, I am just hoping to impress somebody such as a scientist who might give me a hand with my notions and help correct my maths if they are at error to begin with. Is that the answer you wanted? normal representation of high frequency means what? Can you explain the concept in simple terms? If not how is somebody going to help you otherwise? Why do you think you need maths to explain a theory? By trying to blag it you will not get anybody to take you seriously because it makes it patently obvious that you do not know what you are talking about.
Quote from: The Spoon on 03/11/2017 14:58:14 This is known as trying to blag it.Of course, I am trying to blag it and be a fake scientist, however I do understand in my own head what the maths stands for. Hf is the normal representation of high frequency and S is normally entropy , the surface/volume of a sphere is standard maths and the greater than and less than signs are standard. I had already worked out before that :Kmax = at the speed of light c. So by blagging it, I am just hoping to impress somebody such as a scientist who might give me a hand with my notions and help correct my maths if they are at error to begin with. Is that the answer you wanted?
This is known as trying to blag it.
added- QuoteDark energy makes up approximately 68% of the universe and appears to be associated with the vacuum in space. It is distributed evenly throughout the universe,The n-fields makes up approximately 68% of the universe and appears to be associated with the vacuum in space. It is distributed evenly throughout the universe,
Quote from: Bogie_smiles on 02/11/2017 19:33:42Could you fill us in a little more about this 9th planet? Links to discussions, circumstantial evidence, etc.?I'd be happy to;http://www.caltech.edu/news/caltech-researchers-find-evidence-real-ninth-planet-49523
Could you fill us in a little more about this 9th planet? Links to discussions, circumstantial evidence, etc.?
Quote from: Thebox on 03/11/2017 15:22:27added- QuoteDark energy makes up approximately 68% of the universe and appears to be associated with the vacuum in space. It is distributed evenly throughout the universe,The n-fields makes up approximately 68% of the universe and appears to be associated with the vacuum in space. It is distributed evenly throughout the universe,Is this the same N-Field that has already been debunked on other threads by any chance?Also please do enlighten me on how the N-Field has the approximate mass/energy of 68% of the universe? Being called an N-Field I struggle to place it anywhere close to 68%?
only use science that exists see.... I don't make things up or use things that are made up. I use science factual data.
Dark matter could form planets, stars, galaxies or even living things if the type you are positing is "mirror matter". Mirror matter behaves exactly the same way as normal matter, except that it would interact with normal matter only through the gravitational force.* This would make mirror matter invisible and intangible. However, if all dark matter was composed of mirror matter, we would expect it to be distributed in a similar way to normal matter throughout galaxies, which would cause the galaxy rotation curves to be different than we observe them to be. So although some dark matter might be mirror matter, much of it is likely of a form that is diffuse and does not condense readily into things like planets.See here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirror_matter*It could also theoretically interact via the electromagnetic force on a very weak scale by the process of photon-mirror photon mixing.
Isn't the N-Field/n-field made up though? I don't see any sort of mention of it elsewhere on Google or Bing.
Quote from: atbsphotography on 03/11/2017 15:50:02Isn't the N-Field/n-field made up though? I don't see any sort of mention of it elsewhere on Google or Bing.That would be because it is new and not yet been put on google search or Wiki etc. The difference is the n-field is not made up. It is a physical thing that has and is observed every day . I have not made anything up in my theory I only used hard factual science that exists and is easily provable. So unless the factual science is incorrect my theory must be correct.
Dark energy and dark matter are of the imagination
The n-fields makes up approximately 68% of the universe and appears to be associated with the vacuum in space. It is distributed evenly throughout the universe,
=>4/3 πr³
What is your proposed explanation for the galactic rotation curve anomaly?
What experiment did you use to determine that your n-field makes up 68% of the Universe? What test did you use to distinguish your n-field from other possible energy sources?
Can you give us an example calculation with your formula? You know, so we can know that it works?
Mass doesn't exist, the dark matter is a bullshit.
Faraday's electromotive force.
The experiment I did was to replace the semantics of dark matter theory and to post it to see how it went down with the readers.
I am not Maxwell, I am more of a Faraday so of course not. I am giving you ''hints'' towards the maths. (formula)
Plus a can of gas to a balloons interior equals the size the balloon. Use a bigger can of gas and get a bigger balloon.
easy if mass doesn't exist, the sign of the attraction is the cosinus of the phase angle, can be positive or negative
Please demonstrate that Faraday's electromotive force can replicate the galactic rotation curve data of the galaxy