captcass Posted May 27, 2021 Share Posted May 27, 2021 Hi folks. I finally found my formulas. Thank you, Mordred, for your early help and decent, courteous, replies. What is happening is this: Time evolves space, and spatial events, forward at c in the forward direction of time. Densities in space, masses, slow that evolution and their velocities are how time keeps them up with the rest of the continuum. Since orbital velocity, VO, = √(GM/R), the time dilation formulas for orbital velocities are derived from the gravitational time dilation formula, T0 = T√1 – (2GM/Rc2), which contains the velocity formula, by substituting VO for GM/R, i.e.: T0 = T√1 – ((2/c2)(VO)), resulting in: VOp = √2*√((Tc2 – T0c2)/2T)), for planetary and moon velocities, where T = 1 is the distant observer’s invariant rate of universal time, T0 is the rate of time of the coordinate point, and √2 is the gravitational acceleration factor, due to the fact that the multipliers for the planets are in the range of Mercury = 1.41474412726671 and Neptune = 1.41379959891788, very close to √2 at1.4142, and what follows: Einstein's Fundamental Metric (with the x,y,z,t,coordinates), describes the diagonal of a cube. (image in the paper). Assigning 1 km for the length of each side, we see that the diagonal, y = √3 and the hypotenuse of a side x = √2, and we find that using VOg = (√((Tc2 – T0c2)/2T))/((√3)/(√2)) = (√2*√((Tc2 – T0c2)/2T))/(√3), using the Sun’s surface dilation factor, gives us us the actual galactic rotational velocity of 231 km/s for the Sun. Again, looking at the cube, Y is the Fundamental Direction of Evolution. The planets appear accelerated in the plane of the ecliptic, along X, at √2. The stellar system as a whole, centered on the Sun, is also being accelerated by a factor of √2, but it is along Y, the FDE, so the planetary result is divided by √3. As in the cube, this keeps the planets in the same plane of evolution as the Sun. So, the equations are: VOp = √2*√((Tc2 – T0c2)/2T)), for planetary and moon velocities and: VOg = (√2*√((Tc2 – T0c2)/2T))/(√3), for galactic velocities. Since T=1, these formulas reduce to: VOp = √(c2 – T0c2), for planetary and moon orbital velocities and: VOg = √((c2 – T0c2))/(√3), for galactic rotational velocities. For cometary velocities, it is necessary to derive the time dilation velocity formula from the Vis-Viva equation, which is: VOc = √((2*(c2 – T0c2) – (c2 – T0αc2)) Where T0 = the rate of time factor for “r” in the Vis-Viva equation and T0α = the rate of time factor for a distance equal to the length of the semi-major axis, α. Since this is the derivation for the Vis-Viva formula, it is the exact solution for any stellar system body when using the dilation gradient of the central mass of the stellar or planetary system. The Force in Time Now that we know that √(GM/r) = √(c2 – c2T0), we can make that substitution in other equations. Deriving the gravitational force, in Newtons, through time dilation, we use Newton’s equation: F = G(M1m2)/r2 = (GM1/r)*(m2/r) = (√(c2 – c2*To)2*(m2/r) = ((m2)(c2 – c2To))/r, where To is the rate of time factor for the coordinate mass, m2. Of course, the equation works in the obverse for the other mass, M1. As of today, 75% of the astrophysicists/astronomers in the English-speaking universities worldwide have downloaded my paper. The latest version is at thetruecosmology.com. If you have downloaded it before, please hit "refresh" when the paper loads so you get the latest version, and not your cached version. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pzkpfw Posted May 27, 2021 Share Posted May 27, 2021 It's the time cube. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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