Good points, but first it was dark matter, which is not such
a popular idea any more, and now it is dark energy.
Sounds a lot like the theory of "ether" that was
prevalent well into the 19th century.
 
I have no idea what this "dark energy" is , either. And that
seems to be the problem, no-one else knows what it is.
 
Well, I am a 'civilian' amongst people with knowledge of such things
that I can hardly imagine. Just saying that Ockham's razor
strikes me as a smart idea itself. Which is the simpler explanation ?
Usually the simplest explanation is the right one. Not always,  usually.
 
About physics, I may shoot off my mouth but ultimately
others will supply the "final" answers.
 
Billy
 
 
--------------------------------------------------------
 
message dated 10/6/2011 9:46:29 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

 
I don’t think you  want to want to rule out dark energy.  I have no idea 
what it is, but it  seems to represent the bulk of the mass in the in the 
universe; therefore, it  would have a great deal of influence on the gravity.  
If gravity is a  form of energy, then dark matter matters. 
Chris   
 

 
 
From:  [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]]  On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2011  10:27 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc:  [email protected]
Subject: Re: [RC] Dumb  Question

 
 
Opik's  Razor
 

 
Clear as a bell. Great, succinct  way to explain things.
 

 
OK, understanding that much now,  here's my dilemma :
 
After any explosion the energy  source is depleted. 
 
None remains. The gunpowder or  U-234, or whatnot,
 
is used  up.
 

 
Seems to me that what propels  the explosive "cloud" is
 
momentum. The shrapnel or other  residue no longer 
 
draws on a source of energy. It  is self propelled,
 
you might say.  
 

 
Or think of a skier. He or she  pushes off at the top of a ski run.
 
That's all the energy it takes.  Not even one HP. But in a half minute
 
the skier is zooming along at 70  MPH. Gravity does just about
 
everything necessary. But is  gravity a form of "energy" ?
 

 
If it is, I have never heard of  gravity described this way before.
 

 
In a 3-dimensional volume there  is no up or down, of course,
 
and gravity can pull in any  direction. 
 

 
Now, do we know that  the Visible Universe is limitless or infinite
 
in extent in every direction ?  We don't have a clue.
 

 
There was an astronomer /  astrophysicist named Opik, think this
 
is the correct spelling, who  posited that we exist in a field of universes,
 
like soap bubbles in a sink,  each bubble a universe. 
 

 
Is this view testable ?   Maybe it is. If it is true, then no energy source
 
is necessary to account for  acceleration. Nearby bubbles  / universes
 
are providing the impetus. The  gravity would be very distended,
 
no idea if it could be measured,  but even an itty-bit per cubic X  of 
volume
 
and that would be sufficient, so  it seems to me. Viz  Cumulative effect
 
added up over billions of  years.
 

 
Ergo, no need to speculate about  "dark energy."  You need to
 
identify where the celestial  gravity is coming from.
 

 
This model is simple ( Ockham's  razor ) and elegant.
 

 
OK, tear it apart, see if I  care.
 

 
Billy 
 

 

 
PS
 
You do realize, don't you,  that I need coherence
 
for my system of science-fiction  planets ?
 
Why else would I be so tenacious  ?
 
I don't really have feelings for  the Crab Nebula
 
or for far off galaxies  discovered by Hubble,
 
but I have proprietary  interest in my
 
dozens of imaginary  worlds.
 

 

 
-----------------------------------------------------------
 

 

 
message dated 10/6/2011  [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   writes:

 
Actually,  the pitcher’s upper arm isn’t traveling at 95 mph, but with the 
leverage of  his external limb, wrist, hand, and digits he can achieve 95 
mph at the tips  of his fingers when the ball is released.  Stick an atlatl 
at the end  of his hand and you get even greater velocity thanks to the 
leverage of the  atlatl.  The energy that propels the object is provided by the 
 
thrower’s muscles, the velocity is increased by  leverage. 
With  a universe that is expanding at an accelerating pace, we have to 
assume that  there is some “muscle” that is still providing energy to increase 
the rate  of expansion.  Who knows, perhaps the energy source ended and a  
universe-sized atlatl is still whipping around because of the original  
energy imparted by the big bang.     
Chris 
 
------------------------------------------
Christopher P. Hahn, Ph.D. 
Constructive  Agreement, LLC 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
P.O. Box 39, Bozeman,  MT  59771 
(406)  522-4143 (406) 556-7116  fax
------------------------------------------ 

 
 
From:  [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])   
_[mailto:[email protected]]_ 
(mailto:[mailto:[email protected]])   On Behalf Of 
[email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) 
Sent: Thursday,  October 06, 2011 4:50 PM
To: [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected]) 
Cc:  [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) 
Subject: Re: [RC]  Dumb Question

 
 
comments  below
 

 

 
message dated 10/6/2011 3:40:58  P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   writes:

Hi  Billy,  
 
 
 
On  Oct 6, 2011, at 3:07 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])   
wrote:

 
OK,  assuming that much, why wouldn't simple inertia account  for
 
current  observations about the accelerated speed of  expansion
 
of the  universe ?  That is, throw a baseball and for a time its  speed
 
is far  greater than the speed of the pitcher's arm  movements
 
that  released the ball. Yes, it begins to decelerate after a  distance
 
but not  until X distance has been traversed.
 



 
Um , yes. 
 

 

 
If for no other reason that a  pitcher stands on a mound which is
 
a foot or so higher than the  playing field.
 

 
Really obvious  if  the pitcher was standing on top of a mountain  peak
 
in the Sierras. The force of  gravity would add acceleration to the speed
 
of the ball, at least for X  distance. And all this is about is the 
distance "X."
 

 
But is a pitcher's arm really  zooming along at 95 mph when getting set
 
to throw a ball ?  That is  a typical speed for a ball thrown by a
 
major league pitcher. Seems to  me this is also about
 
the multiplier effect of  leverage.
 

 

 
Billy
 

 

 
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

 
 

 
Um,  no.  At release, the ball is moving exactly as fast as the fingers  
that propelled it.  After that, it slows down due to friction, unless  gravity 
is accelerating it downwards.
 

 
If  the universes is accelerating after "release", something is effectively 
 "pulling" it.
 

 
E


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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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