"The
motion of stars has helped prove Einstein correct again. Credit: UPI /
Alamy"
"Einstein was right about how
extremely massive objects fall in space":
The
mainstream media glorifies Einstein any chance they get. He is always proven
right, even when the “proof” was done centuries ago by someone else. This
article is one of the silliest. Even grade-school kids are supposed to know “Galileo
dropped a big one and a small one off the Tower of Pisa, with both arriving at
the same time.” According to Wikipedia, even that did not actually happen. That
experiment was performed a few years before Galileo’s imperiment[1]:
“A
similar experiment took place some years earlier in Delft in the Netherlands,
when the mathematician and physicist Simon Stevin and Jan Cornets de Groot (the
father of Hugo de Groot) conducted the experiment from the top of the Nieuwe
Kerk. The experiment is described in Simon Stevin's 1586 book De Beghinselen
der Weeghconst (The Principles of Statics), a landmark book on statics:
Let
us take (as the highly educated Jan Cornets de Groot, the diligent researcher
of the mysteries of Nature, and I have done) two balls of lead, the one ten
times bigger and heavier than the other, and let them drop together from 30
feet high, and it will show, that the lightest ball is not ten times longer
under way than the heaviest, but they fall together at the same time on the
ground.”
Anyway,
the observation being promoted as yet another “proof” of Einstein’s General
Relativity Theory is no such thing. That three different stars having different
masses should respond to gravitation in the same way is nothing new. Remember
that anything attributed to Einstein’s “curved space-time” is
really due to aetherial pressure differences produced by aether particle deceleration
via collisions with massive bodies.[2]
[1] IMPERIMENT. A thought “experiment.” I invented this as a proper
replacement for what was formerly considered a “thought experiment” by
quasi-immaterialists such as Einstein. Strictly speaking, an experiment only
can occur outside the mind per the prefix “ex.” Science discovers truth through
observation and experiment. Imperiments may be useful for predicting
experimental results, but they have little credence among materialists
(scientists) until those experiments actually are performed. There is no published
evidence Galileo actually did the experiment attributed to him.
[2] Borchardt, Glenn, 2018, The physical cause of gravitation:
Preprint. [http://vixra.org/abs/1806.0165].
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