Bignose, I appreciate your response, thank you.
My "project" reminds me of Niels Bohr--if you aren't shocked by quantum theory, you don't really understand it.
I think that this shock is a function of the deep mystery of the complex plane itself, without which quantum theory is unthinkable.
The complex plane's design is exponential/logarithmic (non-dual, you can't have one without the other). i ln(z) is the inverse of e^iz
This link shows the second derivative of i ln(z): http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=i+ln%27%27%28z%29
I think it can be said that i ln''(z) = - i/z^2 is the "imaginary" second derivative or "deceleration" of e^ix...the "real" second derivative is of course minus e^ix...
The idea that I want partners in imagining is that -i/z^2 is the source of the inverse square relationship that is attributed to gravity. It actually isn't any more shocking than quantum theory. We have been so attached to Newton's gravitational force that we had to make up dark matter when the math no longer worked. Why not something as impossible to grok as quantum theory was? The real number line is actually defined mathematically by i ln''(z).... This is the only place in the complex plane where the real part is the real number line. The real number line represents the flat, steady-state mean between complex exponential "space" and the complex logarithmic "time". (See bottom about natural log)
The only "evidence" for it is that it eliminates the need for dark matter and dark energy, missing mass and missing gravitons, accelerating expansion, inflation, etc. The math works. It's the physical interpretation that boggles the mind.
As for the dark matter map, the article says, "Dark matter has never been directly detected, but its presence is felt through its gravitational pull on normal matter". It is a map on where dark matter "must" be to explain the inverse square geometry of things.
I really appreciate your response -- even if you now tell me to take this elsewhere.
http://betterexplained.com/articles/demystifying-the-natural-logarithm-ln/
The natural log is about time--the time needed to reach a certain level of growth.