The latest years I have been busy doing carpentry on our houses, and bringing up my two sons. One son with a diagnosis, that has demanded much effort from me. My plan before going "all-in" on the reconstruction of Besslers wheel, became to make our home complete and family safe and happy, including mental support/time for our kids. Luckily my son also had great talents that needed nurturing. He was demanding in school, and was first thought to be "dumb" and moody. All he wanted was to study maps, flags, facts, history and space. If not, he was angry and "in his own world".
I have worked to get the school to accept his talents, rather trying to make he just fit in. When he tried chess, we could prove that he had some special intelligence. I have sat down and learned chess with him, and have tried to follow.. After studying chess for 3 months on Youtube at age 11, I took him to the local chessclub for adults. He started beating several of them right away, and created quite a stir.. I felt this was now the first time we got to harvest from all the years of hard work, and we could prove he had good things going for him. And after another Youtube study, he also won the school song/dance competition. Solo-singing perfectly the whole "Nations of the world", https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V1508wboZXk
My son is now 13, he now wins chess tournaments, and more and more often he asks me about my personal take on the universe. If the machine existed..What about the Big Bang, what about the universe's own creation, or "God"? What about energy in your view, daddy? He reads up on latest theories, and got his numbers straight.. Then he wants to know of my work on Bessler.. who was he? Did it happen? Who was Leibniz, what happened to the last machine he had? What laws of the universe must be wrong, if the machine was real? I answer that today's "laws" of the universe doesn't allow the machine to have worked as claimed. But what if it did work as claimed? Well, then energy at some level/s has to be able to be created and destroyed.. simple as that.. Where does that lead us? he asks.. Well. let's do a thought experiment: If light/energy could be "destroyed".. then the Red-Shift does not have to be physical expansion.. and then the Big Bang doesn't have to have happened 13 mill years ago..but could be much older.. Then if Big Bang didn't happen.. then energy through some property/process in space must be created then..? If so, then both Big Bang and God's creation would obsolete then daddy? Well.. yes, sort of..maybe..
Then he has started to study my findings, my code-documentation and so forth. Happily he easily understands what it says and he is VERY exited. So now it is my son that pushes me to start to build the final experiments and model/product. But firstly the family must be provided for, the houses totally fixed, so nobody cares if we work for a year and fails miserably, I say.. He understands..
With all this in mind, I came across this research/study article below. I always look for studies that will allow the existence of Bessler's wheel, and I'm looking forward to show it to my son later today.
Best wishes from a fulfilled father
Øystein
Enter Rajendra Gupta, a seasoned physics professor who isn’t afraid to question the status quo. With years of research under his belt, Gupta is shaking up our understanding of the universe.
Gupta, based at the University of Ottawa, conducted a study that suggests we might not need dark matter or dark energy to explain the workings of the universe. This bold claim is turning heads in the scientific community.
“Tired light” and the CCC theory
At the core of Gupta’s research is a model that combines two theories: covarying coupling constants (CCC) and “tired light” (TL).
We’ve always been taught that the fundamental constants of nature — like the speed of light or the charge of an electron — are unchanging. But what if they aren’t fixed after all?
The CCC theory suggests these constants might actually vary across the universe. If that’s the case, it could alter our understanding of everything from the tiniest particles to the largest galaxies.
Then there’s the “Tired Light” idea. Normally, we think the redshift of light from distant galaxies — the way light stretches into longer, redder wavelengths — is because the universe is expanding.
But the TL model offers a different take: maybe light loses energy over vast distances. This energy loss would cause the redshift without needing the universe to expand.
So, what happens when you put these two theories together?
https://www.earth.com/news/study-dark-m ... e_vignette