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General chat for Physics SE (physics.stackexchange.com). For M...
Jun 26 11:41
*** The paper proves that temporal deceleration results in the same conditions based on supernova 1a flux and redshift measurements that have led people to conclude that as-yet-completely-undefined dark energy is causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate. *** And my theory at least has an identifiable cause : the rate of time is slowing as the universe expands. If anyone is interested in reading it, please visit chat.stackexchange.com/rooms/160449/room-for-zenfox42
Jun 26 11:41
So, here's my one allowed post regarding a journal-quality paper I have written : The basic idea is : the space-time relationship observed in Schwarzschild black holes, where spatial expansion corresponds with temporal slowing, could be extrapolated to the universe as a whole. So that as the universe expands, a relativistic deceleration of cosmic time occurs.
Jun 25 08:58
Question for everyone : does anyone know of a website that allows posts of speculative, non-mainstream physics topics? Other than Arxiv, which I do not qualify for...
Jun 25 08:34
@RyderRude - ok, thanks for that info! So, @ACuriousMind, would you also delete my earlier reply to you as well?
Jun 25 08:31
Oh...apparently posts cannot be deleted after a certain amount of time? So may I go ahead and make my one allowed message?
Jun 25 08:29
@ACuriousMind - if you would be so kind as to delete your posts referencing my paper, then I will delete this post, and make my one allowed message here officially announcing my paper. Thanks!
Jun 24 17:19
I have to sign off for the day, but I'll be back as early as 5 AM EST tomorrow.
Jun 24 16:39
@ACuriousMind - I got the message the first time from wizzwizz4, and peterh did not change my mind. Is there a chat in StackExchange that would allow me to do that?
Jun 24 12:39
@Interstellar - are you saying that I would need a moderator's ok to just post a link to the document here in the chat?
Jun 24 12:17
This is a question for a moderator : I have a short, journal-quality paper that I would like to post for others to review. Is this allowed here?
 
Jun 26 11:30
I have not looked into it with this paper, but it's possible that temporal deceleration could explain the perceived initial deceleration as well...
Jun 25 13:15
These consequences lead to the same conditions that are assumed to indicate that the universe's expansion is accelerating, which is traditionally attributed to dark energy.
Jun 25 13:15
@peterh - yes, proper time can slow down compared to coordinate time (which remains constant within a chosen coordinate system, like the universe). We cannot measure the slow down of proper time directly, but only thru the effects that that slow-down causes, like increasing measured redshifts and decreasing measured stellar intensities, which my paper proves are actual consequences.
Jun 25 09:12
The "it" in my last sentence was referring to coordinate time.
Jun 25 08:55
@peterh - and you're right, it is unmeasureable.
Jun 25 08:51
@peterh - coordinate time is the background reference time that always ticks at the same rate within a chosen coordinate system. Proper time is the time measured by a physical clock moving along a specific worldline (a path through spacetime). It is the actual elapsed time experienced by an observer. Observers experiencing strong gravity or moving at high speeds may have their proper time diverge significantly from coordinate time.
Jun 25 08:44
@peterh - apparently you can only upload images, you can't upload PDF's.
Jun 24 17:40
@ACuriousMind - thanks, my OP about my paper is now the first post in this chat!
Jun 24 17:07
I have to sign off for the day, but I will be back as early as 5 AM EST tomorrow...
Jun 24 17:07
@ACuriousMind - thanks for creating the room for me! I see that my original post about my paper had been removed from here, but I don't see it in the new room. Can you fix that?
Jun 24 16:17
@peterh - thanks for the reference, I'll check it out!
Jun 24 16:12
@peterh - well, my post was deleted because a moderator (I'm assuming) said "no non-mainstream physics posts". So I don't know how much I'm allowed to answer your questions. But I will venture to say that there's a difference between "proper time" and "coordinate time", and in my theory proper time is slowing down compared to coordinate time.
Jun 24 15:28
@zizzwizz4 - FWIW, my non-mainstream theory results in the exact same conditions that are used to determine that the universe's expansion is accelerating, for which the as-yet-completely-unknown "dark energy" is currently used to explain. And my theory at least has an identifiable cause : the rate of time is slowing as the universe expands. Just because it's "mainstream" doesn't mean it's right.... But I understand, policy is policy.
Jun 24 13:26
Oh, sorry, I thought that was why you weren't in the IP given by your ISP. Can you switch to your given IP briefly?
Jun 24 13:24
@peterh - that's it! In a private window, I got asked for a login to my own account! Sorry, I can't think of any way to get that file to you unless you briefly open a regular browser window just to access the file...
Jun 24 13:08
Can someone else try the link in my previous post and tell me if it worked or not for you? Thanks!
Jun 24 13:04
I've done this before, and other were able to access my files fine. Are you using a TOR or other Onion process? Google gets weird with them...
Jun 24 12:57
@peterh - I don't understand. In my Google Drive, I allowed access to anyone with the link, and I've confirmed that (for me at least), clicking on the link in my previous post opens the PDF. What exactly do you mean by "access can be asked as well", and that the "ask reveals my Google account? Is there another way to "make it public"?
Jun 24 12:55
@Interstellar - I don't qualify to publish in Arxiv.
Jun 24 12:44
ALL - please review an idea I have about explaining dark energy as cosmic temporal deceleration. The main body of the paper is only 4 pages long.

I have a 4.0 GPA PhD in Electrical Engineering, was a college professor for 20 years, and understand General Relativity and Quantum Field Theory at a college-undergraduate level. This is just my way of saying "I'm not a crackpot". ;)

The basic idea is : the space-time relationship observed in Schwarzschild black holes, where spatial expansion corresponds with temporal slowing, could be extrapolated to the universe as a whole. So that as the univ