Thursday, August 3, 2017

Mass Condensation and the Separation of Colors and Matter

Mass condensation makes things increasingly different over time. Things that were roughly equally massive in the distant past is now quite different in mass.

Air and water were once fairly similar in density. Now, they are vastly different.

The density of air and water were relatively more similar to carbon and calcium in the past. This allowed giant insects to float in the atmosphere, and armored fishes to swim in the sea.

Since light colors represent differences in mass, all light was redder and softer in the distant past. The whole visible light spectra was shifted towards the red end. Rainbows in the distant past did not have any blue in them, because our Sun did not emit any blue light. Our sun radiated a golden red color.

Orbits too have been affected by mass condensation. They have become wider.

This is all due to mass condensation.

Over eons, colors and matter have been separated into ever wider distinctions.

Strangely enough, ancient myths tell us of this process. God is always busy separating things. Everything was the same to start with. First there was light. Dark was separated from light. Air was separated from water. Land was separated from water and air, and so on and so forth.

The color blue is never mentioned in ancient texts. Homer described the sea as wine red. He never mentions blue.

The ancient Greeks tell us of a golden age. Light was softer, with a golden glow.

Ancient astronomers appear to have had detailed knowledge of the planets. They knew that Mars was scarred, that Jupiter had bands and that Saturn had rings. The orbits appear to have been closer.

This is surprising because it indicates that the ongoing separation of colors and matter has happened at a noticeable rate through human history. Instead of millions of years, we are talking a few hundred thousand years at the very most.

It is as if things have happened at a much faster rate than what is assumed by mainstream science.

Light dispersion of a mercury-vapor lamp with a flint glass prism IPNr°0125.jpg
Light dispersion

By D-Kuru - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0 at, Link

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