From: mpc755 on 8 Dec 2009 16:11 The 'aether is not at rest when displaced' is my statement, not glird's. glird and I have similar concepts about how aether (or if I can interpret glird's preferred description of 'empty space' as 'matter in its base state') is displaced by matter. When you say, 'Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of the matter', that is Aether Displacement. Aether is displaced by mass per volume. The more massive an object is per volume, the less aether it contains, the more aether it displaces. All else being equal, the more massive an object is per volume, the harder it is for aether to 'flow through' the moving object. What happens to the aether in front of the C-60 molecule as the C-60 molecule moves towards the slits in a double slit experiment? Some of the aether will flow slower through the C-60 molecule than the aether that flows around the C-60 molecule, relative to the C-60 molecule. What happens to the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecules path? Not all of the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecule is able to travel through the C-60 molecule at a slower rate than the aether which flows around the C-60 molecule. Some, if not most, of the aether in front of the path the C-60 molecule travels will be displaced by the C-60 molecule. Think about what you are saying as to 'Flowing ether is slowed down by passing through matter' and relate that to a boat and its bow wave. If the boat had tiny holes drilled throughout it where some of the water was able to pass through the boat, the water which passes through the boat is 'slowed down' as it passes through the boat as compared to the water passing by the sides of the boat, relative to the boat. What about the water directly in front of the boat which is able to pass through the boat? What happens to that water? It is displaced by the boat. The water directly in front of the boats path, which isn't able to flow through the boat, is displaced which displaces the the neighboring water. This displaced water forms the bow wave. The same thing occurs when a C-60 molecule is used in a double slit experiment. Some small amount of aether may be flowing through the C-60 molecule, but the majority of aether in front of the C-60 molecule is being displaced by the C-60 molecule and this displaced aether displaces the neighboring aether. This displaced aether forms a wave. In Aether Displacement, the C-60 molecule is always detected exiting a single slit because it always exits a single slit and it is the displacement wave (i.e. bow wave) the C-60 molecule creates in the aether which enters and exits multiple slits. On Dec 8, 1:49 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote: > On Nov 29, 8:23 pm, glird <gl...(a)aol.com> wrote: > > Dear glird: Your opening statement seems to say... "When ether is > moved, it doesn't rest." (That's quite 'profound', but probably not > what you thought you were saying.) Gravity, indeed, relates to what > happens with the ether. "Varying ether flow and density", even within > matter, is the MECHANISM of gravity. Matter doesn't displace ether, > it admits the ether in proportion to the internal loss of ether from > light or heat emissions. Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in > passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of > the matter. That is why massive objects have more... 'weight'. > NoEinstein > > > > > On Nov 29, 1:34 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > >< Aether is an elastic medium and does not rest when displaced. It pushes back. When matter displaces the aether, the pressure the aether exerts back towards the matter is gravity. > >
From: mpc755 on 8 Dec 2009 16:15 The 'aether is not at rest when displaced' is my statement, not glird's. glird and I have similar concepts about how aether (or if I can interpret glird's preferred description of 'empty space' as 'matter in its base state') is displaced by matter. When you say, 'Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of the matter', that is Aether Displacement. Aether is displaced by mass per volume. The more massive an object is per volume, the less aether it contains, the more aether it displaces. All else being equal, the more massive an object is per volume, the harder it is for aether to 'flow through' the moving object. What happens to the aether in front of the C-60 molecule as the C-60 molecule moves towards the slits in a double slit experiment? Some of the aether will flow slower through the C-60 molecule than the aether that flows around the C-60 molecule, relative to the C-60 molecule. What happens to the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecules path? Not all of the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecule is able to travel through the C-60 molecule at a slower rate than the aether which flows around the C-60 molecule. Some, if not most, of the aether in front of the path the C-60 molecule travels will be displaced by the C-60 molecule. Think about what you are saying as to 'Flowing ether is slowed down by passing through matter' and relate that to a boat and its bow wave. If the boat had tiny holes drilled throughout it where some of the water was able to pass through the boat, the water which passes through the boat is 'slowed down' as it passes through the boat as compared to the water passing by the sides of the boat, relative to the boat. What about the water directly in front of the boat which is unable to pass through the boat? What happens to that water? It is displaced by the boat. The water directly in front of the boats path, which isn't able to flow through the boat, is displaced which displaces the neighboring water. This displaced water forms the bow wave. The same thing occurs when a C-60 molecule is used in a double slit experiment. Some small amount of aether may be flowing through the C-60 molecule, but the majority of aether in front of the C-60 molecule is being displaced by the C-60 molecule and this displaced aether displaces the neighboring aether. This displaced aether forms a wave. In Aether Displacement, the C-60 molecule is always detected exiting a single slit because it always exits a single slit and it is the displacement wave (i.e. bow wave) the C-60 molecule creates in the aether which enters and exits multiple slits. On Dec 8, 1:49 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote: > On Nov 29, 8:23 pm, glird <gl...(a)aol.com> wrote: > > Dear glird: Your opening statement seems to say... "When ether is > moved, it doesn't rest." (That's quite 'profound', but probably not > what you thought you were saying.) Gravity, indeed, relates to what > happens with the ether. "Varying ether flow and density", even within > matter, is the MECHANISM of gravity. Matter doesn't displace ether, > it admits the ether in proportion to the internal loss of ether from > light or heat emissions. Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in > passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of > the matter. That is why massive objects have more... 'weight'. > NoEinstein > > > > > On Nov 29, 1:34 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > >< Aether is an elastic medium and does not rest when displaced. It pushes back. When matter displaces the aether, the pressure the aether exerts back towards the matter is gravity. > >
From: BURT on 8 Dec 2009 17:11 On Dec 8, 1:15 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > The 'aether is not at rest when displaced' is my statement, not > glird's. glird and I have similar concepts about how aether (or if I > can interpret glird's preferred description of 'empty space' as > 'matter in its base state') is displaced by matter. > > When you say, 'Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in passing > through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of the > matter', that is Aether Displacement. Aether is displaced by mass per > volume. The more massive an object is per volume, the less aether it > contains, the more aether it displaces. All else being equal, the more > massive an object is per volume, the harder it is for aether to 'flow > through' the moving object. > > What happens to the aether in front of the C-60 molecule as the C-60 > molecule moves towards the slits in a double slit experiment? Some of > the aether will flow slower through the C-60 molecule than the aether > that flows around the C-60 molecule, relative to the C-60 molecule. > What happens to the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecules > path? Not all of the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecule is > able to travel through the C-60 molecule at a slower rate than the > aether which flows around the C-60 molecule. Some, if not most, of the > aether in front of the path the C-60 molecule travels will be > displaced by the C-60 molecule. > > Think about what you are saying as to 'Flowing ether is slowed down by > passing through matter' and relate that to a boat and its bow wave. If > the boat had tiny holes drilled throughout it where some of the water > was able to pass through the boat, the water which passes through the > boat is 'slowed down' as it passes through the boat as compared to the > water passing by the sides of the boat, relative to the boat. What > about the water directly in front of the boat which is unable to pass > through the boat? What happens to that water? It is displaced by the > boat. The water directly in front of the boats path, which isn't able > to flow through the boat, is displaced which displaces the neighboring > water. This displaced water forms the bow wave. > > The same thing occurs when a C-60 molecule is used in a double slit > experiment. Some small amount of aether may be flowing through the > C-60 molecule, but the majority of aether in front of the C-60 > molecule is being displaced by the C-60 molecule and this displaced > aether displaces the neighboring aether. This displaced aether forms a > wave. > > In Aether Displacement, the C-60 molecule is always detected exiting a > single slit because it always exits a single slit and it is the > displacement wave (i.e. bow wave) the C-60 molecule creates in the > aether which enters and exits multiple slits. > > On Dec 8, 1:49 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote: > > > > > On Nov 29, 8:23 pm, glird <gl...(a)aol.com> wrote: > > > Dear glird: Your opening statement seems to say... "When ether is > > moved, it doesn't rest." (That's quite 'profound', but probably not > > what you thought you were saying.) Gravity, indeed, relates to what > > happens with the ether. "Varying ether flow and density", even within > > matter, is the MECHANISM of gravity. Matter doesn't displace ether, > > it admits the ether in proportion to the internal loss of ether from > > light or heat emissions. Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in > > passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of > > the matter. That is why massive objects have more... 'weight'. > > NoEinstein > > > > On Nov 29, 1:34 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > > >< Aether is an elastic medium and does not rest when displaced. It pushes back. When matter displaces the aether, the pressure the aether exerts back towards the matter is gravity. >- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - There is an aether side to the atom but energy and field is where the flow is over and through. A particle is infinitely small and dense energy at its core while surrounded by a matterial field that flows and has energy when there is bond. This is either electric or the strong force energy of bond in their fields. Mitch Raemsch
From: mpc755 on 8 Dec 2009 17:49 The 'aether is not at rest when displaced' is my statement, not glird's. glird and I have similar concepts about how aether (or if I can interpret glird's preferred description of 'empty space' as 'matter in its base state') is displaced by matter. When you say, 'Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of the matter', that is Aether Displacement. Aether is displaced by mass per volume. The more massive an object is per volume, the less aether it contains, the more aether it displaces. All else being equal, the more massive an object is per volume, the harder it is for aether to 'flow through' the moving object. What happens to the aether in front of the C-60 molecule as the C-60 molecule moves towards the slits in a double slit experiment? Some of the aether will flow slower through the C-60 molecule than the aether that flows around the C-60 molecule, relative to the C-60 molecule. What happens to the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecules path? Not all of the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecule is able to travel through the C-60 molecule at a slower rate than the aether which flows around the C-60 molecule. Some, if not most, of the aether in front of the path the C-60 molecule travels will be displaced by the C-60 molecule. Think about what you are saying as to 'Flowing ether is slowed down by passing through matter' and relate that to a boat and its bow wave. If the boat had tiny holes drilled throughout it where some of the water was able to pass through the boat, the water which passes through the boat is 'slowed down' as it passes through the boat as compared to the water passing by the sides of the boat, relative to the boat. What about the water directly in front of the boat which is unable to pass through the boat? What happens to that water? It is displaced by the boat. The water directly in front of the boats path, which isn't able to flow through the boat, is displaced which displaces the neighboring water. This displaced water forms the bow wave. The same thing occurs when a C-60 molecule is used in a double slit experiment. Some small amount of aether may be flowing through the C-60 molecule, but the majority of aether in front of the C-60 molecule is being displaced by the C-60 molecule and this displaced aether displaces the neighboring aether. This displaced aether forms a wave. In Aether Displacement, the C-60 molecule is always detected exiting a single slit because it always exits a single slit and it is the displacement wave (i.e. bow wave) the C-60 molecule creates in the aether which enters and exits multiple slits. On Dec 8, 1:49 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote: - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - > On Nov 29, 8:23 pm, glird <gl...(a)aol.com> wrote: > Dear glird: Your opening statement seems to say... "When ether is > moved, it doesn't rest." (That's quite 'profound', but probably not > what you thought you were saying.) Gravity, indeed, relates to what > happens with the ether. "Varying ether flow and density", even within > matter, is the MECHANISM of gravity. Matter doesn't displace ether, > it admits the ether in proportion to the internal loss of ether from > light or heat emissions. Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in > passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of > the matter. That is why massive objects have more... 'weight'. > NoEinstein > > On Nov 29, 1:34 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > >< Aether is an elastic medium and does not rest when displaced. It pushes back. When matter displaces the aether, the pressure the aether exerts back towards the matter is gravity. >
From: BURT on 8 Dec 2009 18:51
On Dec 8, 2:49 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > The 'aether is not at rest when displaced' is my statement, not > glird's. glird and I have similar concepts about how aether (or if I > can interpret glird's preferred description of 'empty space' as > 'matter in its base state') is displaced by matter. > > When you say, 'Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in passing > through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of the > matter', that is Aether Displacement. Aether is displaced by mass per > volume. The more massive an object is per volume, the less aether it > contains, the more aether it displaces. All else being equal, the more > massive an object is per volume, the harder it is for aether to 'flow > through' the moving object. > > What happens to the aether in front of the C-60 molecule as the C-60 > molecule moves towards the slits in a double slit experiment? Some of > the aether will flow slower through the C-60 molecule than the aether > that flows around the C-60 molecule, relative to the C-60 molecule. > What happens to the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecules > path? Not all of the aether directly in front of the C-60 molecule is > able to travel through the C-60 molecule at a slower rate than the > aether which flows around the C-60 molecule. Some, if not most, of the > aether in front of the path the C-60 molecule travels will be > displaced by the C-60 molecule. > > Think about what you are saying as to 'Flowing ether is slowed down by > passing through matter' and relate that to a boat and its bow wave. If > the boat had tiny holes drilled throughout it where some of the water > was able to pass through the boat, the water which passes through the > boat is 'slowed down' as it passes through the boat as compared to the > water passing by the sides of the boat, relative to the boat. What > about the water directly in front of the boat which is unable to pass > through the boat? What happens to that water? It is displaced by the > boat. The water directly in front of the boats path, which isn't able > to flow through the boat, is displaced which displaces the neighboring > water. This displaced water forms the bow wave. > > The same thing occurs when a C-60 molecule is used in a double slit > experiment. Some small amount of aether may be flowing through the > C-60 molecule, but the majority of aether in front of the C-60 > molecule is being displaced by the C-60 molecule and this displaced > aether displaces the neighboring aether. This displaced aether forms a > wave. > > In Aether Displacement, the C-60 molecule is always detected exiting a > single slit because it always exits a single slit and it is the > displacement wave (i.e. bow wave) the C-60 molecule creates in the > aether which enters and exits multiple slits. > > On Dec 8, 1:49 pm, NoEinstein <noeinst...(a)bellsouth.net> wrote: > > - Hide quoted text - > - Show quoted text - > > > > > On Nov 29, 8:23 pm, glird <gl...(a)aol.com> wrote: > > Dear glird: Your opening statement seems to say... "When ether is > > moved, it doesn't rest." (That's quite 'profound', but probably not > > what you thought you were saying.) Gravity, indeed, relates to what > > happens with the ether. "Varying ether flow and density", even within > > matter, is the MECHANISM of gravity. Matter doesn't displace ether, > > it admits the ether in proportion to the internal loss of ether from > > light or heat emissions. Flowing ether (gravity) is slowed down in > > passing through matter in direct proportion to the atomic weight of > > the matter. That is why massive objects have more... 'weight'. > > NoEinstein > > > On Nov 29, 1:34 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > >< Aether is an elastic medium and does not rest when displaced. It pushes back. When matter displaces the aether, the pressure the aether exerts back towards the matter is gravity. >- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - What is the form of an aether wave? |