Gravity Is Fluid Spacetime
Gravity Is Fluid Spacetime
Gravity Is Fluid Spacetime
IS
FLUID
SPACETIME
Introduction to Gravitational Theory: The Nature of Gravity
Gravity is a paradoxical force composed of: Gravity itself,
in relativistic terms, an attractive force made up of the
fluidity of spacetime, and at the same time, in quantum
form, a wave generated by the oscillatory wave functions
created by the various fundamental frequencies of particles
creating the mass. So, in relativistic terms, gravity is a
product of the bends and curves in fluid spacetime, but it
is in effect, also, the waves caused by the interactions of
particles in the fabric of spacetime, thereby making it a
composition of the actual fabric of spacetime in the
fluidic model. This is the paradoxical nature of gravity.
It is both the fluidic changes in spacetime and it is the
wave of frequencies of the gravitationally oscillating
masses within the gravitational field.
Therefore, the paradoxical nature of gravity precludes it
from consisting of a particle called a graviton. Gravity
cannot take the form of a particle because, as common logic
would lead a reasonable person to conclude, the waveparticle nature of light is not consistently analogous to
the nature of gravity as the two forms cannot coexist in
the same capacity since gravity must act in a reactive
manner to light for the relativity and quantum equations to
remain correct. A graviton cannot bounce off a photon to
create gravity it does not make sense.
This paradox of gravity allows a theory to emerge based on
the oscillatory nature of matter. As such, each and every
fundamental particle composing the matter of our universe
has an oscillatory wavelength. These wavelengths connect
with each other through the force of gravity, a wave. The
balancing of the waves of oscillating matter is the wave of
gravity. So, as the particles oscillate, the oscillations
become balanced with each other creating the force of
gravity, and gravity radiates from within the centers of
the mass out into spacetime. This is the understanding of
gravity all the movements of the fundamental particles
combine to create the web of the gravity wave.
Oscillatory Motion
Each fundamental particle has its own fundamental frequency
at which it oscillates. These oscillatory waveforms can be
measured in terms of frequency as they wobble in a
cruciform pattern or other frequency variation. Each
particle oscillates at its own frequency contributing to
the gravitational waveform. Gravity is a wave that arises
out of the ratio of the wobble of fundamental frequency
compared to fundamental frequency.
Studying gravitational waves in collision, the oscillating
fundamental frequencies of a particle before collision will
be congruent to the oscillating fundamental frequencies of
the particle after the momentum of the collision has
completely dissipated. This can be tested in an atom
smasher.
Gravitational Motion: Acceleration over Inertia
Gravitational force thus applies to masses in pulses.
While there is an actual center of gravity in a mass,
gravity is actually created throughout the entire mass in a
gravitational field since the molecules create mass that
has a distance from the center of the mass. As a mass
moves, a gravitational field is created, and gravitational
force applies not by a smooth force but in pulses of
gravitational force. These pulses are measureable in terms
of a ratio of acceleration to inertia. The ratio of
acceleration to inertia defines the number of gravitational
pulses experienced.
If the center of gravity of the mass is at the center of
the gravitational field, relative to itself, and the mass
is relativistically stationary, it has a gravitational
pulse of constant. But if the mass studied is relative to
another mass in a gravitational field, where the mass is
subject to acceleration and inertia, the number of
gravitational pulses per time is equal to the sum of
accelerations divided by the inertia of the mass.
= ( a1 + a2 + an) / p
Where p = mv
Where = number of pulses
(tp)/(1-(v^2/t^2))
(tp)/(1-(v^2/t^2))
= (c^2 - (v(tp)/(1-(v^2/t^2)))^2)
= r(c1)/(c2)x
Where r is the radius of the wave studied from the center
of mass to the peak of the gravitational wave, c1 is the
velocity at which wave is travelling, here close to the
speed of light, c2 is the constant, is the sum of
accelerations of the mass divided by the inertia of the
mass, and x is the change in time dilation measured, using
the above equation.
This partial derivative, when analyzed, gives a study that
allows gravity to be examined as a wave.
Why?
Waves are nothing more than ratios in practical form. The r
component is the radius from the center of the mass, where
the waves of gravity originate, to the y line where they
crash together. This is not an infinite distance because
we are measuring to the y line. The c1 is the velocity of
the path at which the studied mass is traveling - c1 speeds
can approach the speed of light for masses approaching the
speed of light, or slower c1 speeds can work for slower
moving masses. C2 is the speed of light. Time is bent
through the wave of gravity bending space in the fourth
dimension, or in other words, time is bent in the x
direction off of the y line.
is the ratio of gravitational pulses, which changes as
acceleration and inertia change. X is the time dilation
due to gravitational movement. X delineates a bend in
spacetime from the y line to allow us to measure the
gravitational limit. As you can deduce, r and x for the
first gravitational wave are the same distance, but they
consist of different components, so the ratio stands true.
Additional gravitational waves within the first wave can be
measured by using geometric formulations.
The velocity of the wave at the speed of light cancels with
the constant, so the ratio stands true at the speed of
light and therefore also at slower speeds due to the time