polemotheos
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expansion - 2006/04/28 12:44
We percieve the sphere of atomic gallaxies as expanding into the unbounded universe.
Why do they do this when it should be the other way around since gravity attracts.
Imagine now that you could look at the atomic gallaxies as a whole from the out side perspective. What would you notice?
Stars produce light,... this light travels very far but because of gravity it returns back to the sphere of grouped atomic gallaxies. Possibly doing orbits as it goes in and out of the sphere of grouped atomic gallaxies, sometimes colliding into bodies.
What is the result; because all the stars in the universe emit photons and because they are grouped together compared to the unbounded universe the result is that there will always be more photons out of the sphere of grouped atomic gallaxies causing it to expand because of the gravitational attraction to pull the photons back. And therefore producing what we percieve as expansion. Further, the more photons produced in the universe the more the acceleration of expansion.
Ok, I should definitly get a nobel for this one. 
Post edited by: polemotheos, at: 2006/04/28 12:48
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