RedshiftAccording to GTR, time is delayed and space is reduced in heavy stars as nonlocal properties (see Wikipedia: Shapiro delay). The shortening of length is presumably invisible. One doesn't notice the narrowing of the cone of view, and furthermore, one is looking into a magnifying glass sphere. An optician could certainly calculate exactly what is visible here.Thus, the space of the world is reduced from the observer's perspective. The world therefore has more mass per volume than a corresponding Euclidean space. There is also another mass, the potential energy of galaxies among themselves. Because it doesn't form gravitational lenses, it is invisible and, due to its low density, hardly measurable. Overall, however, its contribution exceeds all other masses. I call it - dark matter of the second kind. These two effects cause a redshift, as if one were sitting in the center of a large sphere of mass. But this view is the same at every point in the world. I don't see my view of the world as "steady" but rather very dynamic. After all, apart from mass, only stupidity is immortal, and every ng of mass must be recycled. Only the law of conservation of energy is constant. If mass is removed somewhere, it must reappear somewhere else. An apt description would be: isentropic world. Ludwig Resch |