Re: Dark matter as very long range gravity superchains that rise in spiral galaxies and among millions of galaxies naturally



On Mar 12, 3:58 pm, gb <gb6...@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Is there a very long range gravity in the Universe amongst whom
gravitation forms chains?

It was found, that elliptic galaxies have no dark matter or very
little, but it makes sense
that superchains rise in spiral galaxies, the same very long range
gravity with amplification
that is found in vast distances in the Universe naturally, the very
long range gravity forming
vast chain systems.

We need to find a forming superchain, and show that as that the
missing 74 percent of mass
in the Universe is made up of this mystic dark pure gravitational
force, the very long range
force of gravity forming superchains.

Where superchains rise, and can be curving in S paths in spiral
galaxies forming long range
gravitational structures bind matter gravitationally to these chains,
meaning a set of matter that
travels through a superchain say through an S path does not fly apart.
That is the precise
nature of dark matter, it was shown that without dark matter a spiral
galaxy would fly apart.
Superchains where they rise gravity amplifies. Superchains seem to be
active long range
forces filling the vast Universe with their yet not understood
presence and as superchains,
they form and are not made of matter but bound to structures. However
it is possible that
dark matter is made of unidentified matter, be it particles, planets,
solitary Sun systems.

One might speculate that the natural organization of millions of
galaxy
clusters are superchains, that the most profound source of mass
in the Universe is dark matter. Dark matter forms chains with millions
of galaxies, and rises in small scales in comparison in spiral
galaxies
where formations occur carrying long range gravitational chains.
Elliptic
galaxies carry no such dynamic long range gravitational forces.

.



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