Tuesday, October 17, 2017

The Expanding Earth

Our planet is expanding. The evidence for this is quite overwhelming, and covered extensively in The Gravity Mystery. It is backed up by solid evidence and years of research by people like James Maxlow.

However, the relationship between the expansion and gravity is less clear. There is little evidence for any substantial amount of space dust falling onto our planet, and the expansion is coming from deep inside our planet. Even if there was a lot of space dust falling onto Earth, it would have to find its way deep into the crust in order to produce the observed effect.

The conclusion drawn from The Velcro Universe is that the expansion is only indirectly related to an increase in gravity.

The main reason for an increase in gravity is the fact that protons grow bigger over time. This in itself has nothing to do with the expansion. Bigger protons does not equate bigger atoms. The observed expansion is not directly related to mass condensation, but internal electric pressure.

A strong positive charge at the center of our planet has caused it to crack and expand. This in turn increases its capacitance and charge, which in turn increases the pressure. Once started, the expansion of a planet will accelerate, and our planet is no exception.

This makes our planet bigger without adding any mass. Earth is swelling up like a balloon, which in itself would reduces surface gravity. The expansion is not in itself related to an increase in gravity. On the contrary, it reduces surface gravity.

However, the increased capacitance due to the expansion has the effect of adding charge to our planet. This increases gravity, and is especially noticeable in areas where the crust of our planet is thinner than average. Such areas have stronger than average gravity.

Indirectly, gravity increases due to expansion. But only because of the increase in charge. The main driver for the increase is most likely mass condensation.

The Velcro Universe does not provide a simple model relating expansion directly to an increase in gravity. Rather, it paints a more complex picture. However, this is not a problem. Evidence from the fossil records indicate that gravity increases in fits and starts. A complex relationship makes therefore more sense than some cosmic law or constant.

We are dealing with mass condensation which depends heavily on the availability of high energy photons, and we are dealing with capacitance and charge which depend on geological conditions and sun cycles.

Far from being a simple process following some smooth mathematical curve, the expansion and the increase in gravity follow a random pattern that happens to fit rather well to an overall logarithmic trend.

Earth expansion seen from the south pole
Earth expansion seen from the south pole

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