The Tired Light theory

 

During the creation of a solar system, if you could watch from a distant vantage point, you would literally see a sun slowly appear  out of thin air. From a nebulous cloud, a ball of matter would coalesce from the aethers until its faint, soft glow slowly turned into a mighty radiant fireball. All the while, long streams of matter would flow from its center that are formed into smaller balls of matter that eventually are grown in size until they become planets.

 

The creation of our galaxy began about seven billion years ago. This is in contrast to currently popular theories which dates the beginning of the universe to about fifteen to twenty billion years ago. Note that the Big Bang theory assumes that the entire [physical] universe was essentially created in a single moment: all the matter in the universe, concentrated into a pinpoint volume, exploded and spread out in all directions. However, some theorists are now suggesting that there may be flaws in the procedures used to figure this date, and they calculate that the universe may be closer to ten billion years old. The gap between our philosophy and the scientifically accepted view appears to be closing in this area.

A major question is, “What slows the photons down all the time? In other words, why do you get a red-shift? Remember, at least half of the scientists do not believe in the Doppler Theory; they believe in energy loss. As the particles travel through gravitational and magnetic fields, the particles lose energy and therefore shift towards the red end of the electromagnetic spectrum. So, the community is divided. But, the people who believe in Einstein’s theories are more likely to get published than those who do not. They have broached their arguments challenging it very carefully.

Explanation of the “Red-Shift”

The Brotherhoods have informed us of the explanation for this. As previously discussed, “empty space” is far from empty. Not only are their particles of one sort or another in the vacuum of space, there are also gravitational fields between stars and galaxies. All of this stuff the photon must pass through as it travels from a distant sun to our Earth. As photons travel through all of this stuff, they lose a little of their energy, and, therefore, their frequency is slightly lowered. This, literally, causes their color to change ever so slightly: blue becomes green, green becomes yellow, yellow becomes orange, etc.

 

Despite this, about one-half of the professional astronomers currently accept a theory of the origin of the universe known as the Big Bang theory. In their theory, all of the matter and energy of the universe originated as a result of one huge explosion believed to have occurred about fifteen to twenty billion years ago. This theory, in large part, is based on another theory that states the apparent red-shift of the lines in the spectra of galaxies is due to the Doppler Effect. This is translated to mean that the galaxies are moving away from each other at a percentage of the speed of light and that, consequently, the universe is expanding.

 

The information from the Brotherhoods differs markedly from the Big Bang theory. It states that our galaxy was created about seven billion years ago and that the other galaxies are in approximately the same positions now as they were then. Consequently, the galaxies are not moving away from each other at any appreciable rate. The Brotherhoods also state that the apparent red-shift in the galactic spectral lines is not due to the Doppler Effect, rather, it is due to the energy particles slowing losing energy to the surrounding space as they travel the vast intergalactic distances toward Earth. This also causes an apparent red shift. [Ed. As previously discussed, the speed of light is invariant in any inertial frame which eliminates the possibility that it can exhibit the Doppler Effect.]

 

This information is further supported in scientific circles. For instance, the most recent measurements of the cosmic background radiation do not totally conform to the spectrum of a “three-degree blackbody,” as previously believed. I. E. Segal of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology theorizes that the universe is a non-expanding steady-state universe. He accounts for the galactic red-shift by assuming that as a photon travels it spreads out to longer wavelengths. Hence a red-shifted photon is seen from a source that has not moved away.

 

In an article written by Frank D. Drake of Cornell University (Natural History, “Faster Than the Speed of Light,” February 1979), he presents possible explanations as to why certain objects, at great distances from us, seem to be traveling away from each other at speeds many times that of light. (This is not possible accord­ing to Einstein’s theories and according to the Brotherhoods’ information.) A result of one of the more promising explanations of these phenomena is that the universe is considerably younger than expected—closer to ten billion years of age as opposed to twenty billion. Another result is that use of the Doppler Effect is not giving correct distances to galaxies by a factor of one-half.

 

 

 

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