The Galaxy Model for the Atom



the Galaxy Model
http://users.accesscomm.ca/john

The atom is a disc exactly like
a spiral galaxy.
The center is a Black Hole.
When neutron stars fall into the BH,
they are spun up and the electrons
and protons that constituted the
neutrons separate into highly-
charged plasma.

This plasma is blown out the
magnetic poles of the BH at
right-angles to the center of the galactic
disc and developes into new stars to
replace the old neutron stars that burned
out.

When a galaxy is receiving radiant energy
such as heat, this radiant energy is also spun up,
but instead of having a 1:2 rotations like
matter, it has a 1:1 rotations like light and does
not get blown away by the magnetic field, but
eddies around it as an accretion disc.

The accretion discs around each magnetic pole buildup
until a critical level is reached, which is always
the same for any one galaxy, whereupon they
are shot out in opposite directions (by suddenly
flipping towards each other?) as Quasars,
at 9000 km/sec (as measured
by Halton Arp).

Thus the excited atom builds up accretion discs
of this material that isn't charged
in the way matter is, yet can repel another
mirror-image accretion disc repeatedly at the
same frequency, but experiments have
shown can be perturbed to repel each other
at lower frequencies.

So there are two mirror-image photons created;
those spawned at the north pole
and those at the south pole. Each would
seem to be a conglomerate of something not
like matter but equally numerous. It is
thus possible to split such a conglomerate into
two smaller pieces, whose sizes are proportionate to
their frequencies.

so.....where does that get us?

John

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