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Law of Physics 20th-Century Scientists Overlooked (Part 5): Centrifugal Effect Negation
Author(s) -
Conrad Ranzan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
applied physics research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1916-9647
pISSN - 1916-9639
DOI - 10.5539/apr.v13n2p13
Subject(s) - aether , physics , sagnac effect , theoretical physics , classical mechanics , rotation (mathematics) , limit (mathematics) , motion (physics) , space (punctuation) , spiral galaxy , galaxy , astrophysics , philosophy , quantum mechanics , mathematics , geometry , mathematical analysis , linguistics , interferometry
Explored is another application of the phenomenally successful DSSU’s aether theory of gravity. It is explained how rotational motion with respect to the universal space medium (aether) determines the centrifugal effect. The article details the conditions involved in the attenuation of the Effect; and the extreme condition under which complete negation occurs. Included is a description of how a totally collapsed star —called a Terminal neutron star— is unable to manifest any centrifugal effects; and how, consequently, it can have no theoretical limit on its rate of rotation. Revealed is the fundamental law governing circular motion. This long-overlooked principle of physics leads to a startling and profound implication: Spiral galaxies are able to maintain their structural integrity without the need for so-called dark matter.

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