Theory of the Speed of Light
By Francisco Gómez Paulet
For many years, there has been a mystery in physics which has not yet been solved. The speed of light never varies, we always get the same result. For example, if a light-emitting spotlight is moving towards a device which measures the speed of light at a rate of 1000 km/s, the logical conclusion would be to think that the result would be the speed of light plus the speed of the spotlight, or 301,000 km/s, but this is not the case. The result remains the same with no change seen: 300,000 km/s.
The explanation for this phenomenon is very simple. Movement as we know it does not actually exist in the universe. Matter is always fixed. When we believe that an object is in motion, what is actually happening is that the object disappears and reappears in another position at such a high frequency that we are not aware of it.
This works much like the frames of a film, where still images create the sensation of moving pictures, only in three dimensions.
That is why the photons always leave the emitter at the same speed, even though the emitter is in motion. It is actually in a fixed position at the time the photon is emitted.
Matter, like light, travels through dark matter, only at a variable speed between 0 to 300,000 km/s depending on its linear momentum, that is, on the matter's capacity for linear reappearance.
Matter vibrates between two three-dimensional planes, when disappears from this in which we are appears on the other plane and so on, the universe has 3 dimensions on this plane and 3 others on the other, along with the time dimension makes a total of 7 dimensions.
02/12/2020
goodbye