Re: Nobel Prize for David Thomson?!
From: N:dlzc D:aol T:com \(dlzc\) (net_at_nospam.com)
Date: 12/26/04
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Date: Sun, 26 Dec 2004 14:04:54 -0700
Dear David Thomson:
"David Thomson" <news5@volantis.org> wrote in message
news:tPDzd.11$KT4.278@news.uswest.net...
> "robert j. kolker" <nowhere@nowhere.net> wrote in message
> news:33859oF3t1gltU1@individual.net...
>>
>>
>> Paul Stowe wrote:
>>> Experiments, what experiments???
>>>
>>> OK, please provide a reference to an 'experiment' setup to test Dark
>>> Matter and show us how it was detected in the lab!
>>
>> Not in a lab. You don't find dark matter in a lab any more than you find
>> light bending in a gravity field in a lab or the anomalous preecession
>> of the apihellion of a planet in the lab. You find it where it is, or
>> might be, which is Way Out There.
>
> You won't find gravity bending light ANYWHERE in the Universe.
It is found in our solar system, in signalling to/from Venus. It is found
in sightings of stars during a solar eclipse.
> The gravitational law is based on the force between two masses,
Newton predicts no such effect on light.
> and since photons have zero mass, the gravitational force is zero.
Gravitational force is zero in GR anyway.
> Now if you really wanted to know how light bends around massive objects,
> you might ask me for the answer, because I have it.
No wonder people accuse science of being religion. David Thomson, the
mystic.
> As for dark matter, it exists mainly near massive objects.
Most of it is in the intergalactic void. The balance is inside the visible
rim of spiral galaxies.
> There is more dark matter near Earth than there is in the emptiness of
> space.
Citation?
> But it can't be detected because dark matter exists outside of the
> Aether.
I hope so.
> The Aether is what gives structure to the angular momentum of dark
> matter by imparting the qualities of charges to it.
DM has no charge. It interacts with both itself and normal matter via
gravitation... not charge.
David A. Smith
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