01/12/2024
Galaxies Can Move Through Space Faster Than Speed of Light
The universe is expanding at a speed of 67 kilometers per second per mega parsecs, so as the distance between two galaxies reaches 14 billion light years or more than that, they will recede from one another at a speed of higher than the speed of light. And on the other side we have special relativity which points out that nothing can move through space faster than light. So to solve this mystery, scientists and cosmologists referred to the metric expansion of the universe, where as they emphasis that galaxies are not moving through space, but rather they are stationary in accordance to space and space itself is growing and expanding. So as space grows between two galaxies and new space is created, we would feel that as departure and movement of galaxies through space, by that way they are stationary relative to space and it is space itself that is expanding and moving faster than the speed of light.
So by this explanation they would keep the rules of special relativity unbroken and say: special relativity says that nothing can move through space faster than light, but space itself is exceptional from this rule and can move or grow faster than light without counteracting the laws of relativity.
But I have rejected the metric expansion of the universe in my paper under the title of “Dark Energy Is Not The Cosmological Constant” and according to my own theory for accelerating expansion of the universe, space is not growing or moving, but galaxies themselves must move through space; so am I going to break the rules of relativity?
Absolutely no, but I am going to bring a justification in special relativity, where it would allow galaxies to move through space faster than speed of light, without breaking the laws of relativity. I want to start my explanation with a question: what is the fastest speed on the face of the earth?
Definitely Hadron Collider at CERN is accelerating protons at speed of 0.999999991c. Also speed of muons from cosmic rays at the atmosphere of earth can reach up to 0.9997c. And we know that our Sun with all its planets is moving around the center of the Milky Way with a speed of 230 km/s. So if we combine the speed of protons at CERN’s Hadron Collider or Muons at Earth’s atmosphere with the speed of our Solar System around the center of Milky Way, it will exceed the speed of light. Now, Is special relativity wrong? Absolutely no, because it has been proven by many experiments. Then, is our combination of speeds wrong? Not at all, because it is a fact and addition of the speeds of protons at CERN with the speed of our Solar System around the Milky Way, which gives a higher speed than the speed of light through space, is logical. So what is the clue?
I think there is a misconception in special relativity, we should not say nothing can move faster than light through space, but rather we must say nothing can move faster than light through a gravitational field. All of special relativity’s tests have been done under the gravitational field of the earth, and we have never take into count the movement of our Solar System around the galaxy center, or our Milky Way movement through space toward Andromeda; but why? Because on the face of the earth every phenomenon is dominated by earth’s gravitational field and these phenomena are not under the gravitational field of Sun or the center of Milky Way.
I am not a physicist and nor a cosmologist, but I have lots of theories about cosmological phenomena, especially Dark Energy and Universe Expansion. I cannot do the math for my ideas and this is why the community of scientists and physicists do not accept me. I hope this short explanation change their view about me and my ideas, and give me this opportunity to be heard and judged honestly.
Abdullah Omar
11/2/2023
+93 791717555
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Music License
Prelude No. 8 by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Source: http://chriszabriskie.com/preludes/
Artist: http://chriszabriskie.com/