Black Holes – Dark Matter – Planets – Evolving Stars – Tuesday 1st August 2023


Black Holes – Dark Matter – Planets – Evolving Stars – Tuesday 1st August 2023

For some time I have been considering the concept of evolution for stars and have been forming an essay in my mind. I note that a pair of astronomy articles published yesterday using the term ‘evolution’ which would normally dissuade me from then doing an essay on that subject, but in this instance I decided to still write my essay.
I do think we need to consider evolution beyond our own home planet. Just as we and other life forms evolve, our planet evolves and all that this entails. So it’s natural to assume that stars too must evolve.
Which would indicate that what we see in some stars shouldn’t just be assumed that all are just basic replications of the same. Which must also apply to other planets. Considering what we ourselves must have first commenced as, to what we are now. But stars are very long-lived, so accordingly, their evolution is extremely lengthy in comparison to ours. Our view of them, is a blink of their eye (so to speak). It’s strange to think of our planet Earth having no air to breathe, but over time it evolved and air became.
When we look at another planet, we know that how that planet looks today, isn’t necessarily how it looked billions of years ago, don’t we?
As to ‘rogue planets’ when I was looking at Pluto, I determined it either came into this solar system, having become displaced from its own, or it was of this solar system, having been nudged to the outer region by accident. I decided it must be the latter. Although there must be displaced planets out there, I do not think that there is a multitude of rock planets languishing out in the darkness. They rely and depend on a star, in the darkness and cold, they have no future. And by the same token, our sun, without planets, would exist and shine alone. This is suitable for some stars, but not stars like ours. Which, to my mind, is an indication that our star is a member of a more evolved group.
And their use of metal, it is greatly valued by stars clearly, just as we value it in our own way, and of course planets like Earth can only exist with the availablity of this type of material. And we can only exist, on this type of planet.

Although I was aware of the concept of Dark Matter and Dark Energy, as strange as it may seem, I wasn’t aware that Science perceived it to be what holds galaxies together, (until a week or so ago and an article was discussing a galaxy devoid of Dark Matter).
As people know, I contend we are in a fusion beam and I perceive that the force within the beam, combined with the force exerted by a central black hole and the force exerted by the stars themselves is the combination of forces that stabilise the galaxies. Whirling, precision clockworks come to mind. However, my work indicates that this universe is inside a rotating sphere, which of course this theory also differs greatly to work by the academics in this field.
Not only do I believe the Universe to be much older than currently estimated, I also presume the planets in our solar system to be of differing ages, whereas current estimates determine them to have all formed at the same time.
Yet despite this, I find my work often meets up at different junctions with the work of others, which I rather like.
Lastly, black holes, they do not seem to me to be a mistake or a thing that occurred because an explosion broke matter. The explosion provides the adequate quantity of force needed, in which to create the new opening, or my way of looking at it; it’s the required quantity of force to form a smaller fusion beam, within the one we are in. The explosion didn’t destroy matter, it created with it.
Fiona MacLeod (C)