Critiques of Presentation of Uniform Expansion Theory
Critiques of Presentation of Uniform Expansion Theory
Every couple of years I have the opportunity to present my Uniform Expansion Theory to a group of Advance Placement High school physics students, many of who will receive college credit for the course. These are smart kids.
Historically, I have been able to convince the students that the model makes sense and they have always signed a statement that others with more expertise in the field should review the model. This year I will be forwarding their request to the American Astronomical Society in an effort to convince the organization to allow me to present an oral paper for the January Meeting.
(Specifically, the paper I wish to present will show that based on the Uniform Expansion Model, the correlation of the brightness of type 1a supernovas verses the cosmological red shift corresponds to a “flat” universe. There is no dark energy required for the model, nor is there any need for dark matter. Since the model predicts that the effect of gravity is greater in the past, it would take less mass to reach the Chandrasekhar limiting pressure, which would mean that the supernovas should be smaller by a predictable amount, and therefore dimmer by a predictable amount. Once this effect is accounted for, and mapped to the red shift predicted by the model, the rate of expansion conforms to being “flat”, meaning that there is no dark energy needed. )
In the interest of truth, I thought that this year I would also post on this forum what I taught, thereby allowing a more diverse critique of the model. If I was teaching something wrong, someone within this forum could show the error. (Someday, someone with authority, and more importantly, someone with courage, will acknowledge that what I am teaching is right, and it is the presently taught model that is wrong, but at this site I know I can depend upon critiques).
As I am still in the process of organizing the presentation, it will be a couple of days before I can post it to this site. It may seem a bit premature to begin this thread without the theoretical presentation, but I wanted the link to this site to be available to the students in the material I am providing them tomorrow. The presentation will be on Tuesday June 6.
Thanks
John M. Kulick
AKA Snowflake
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