I heard about the concept of a growing Earth about ten years ago. I did some calculations. I assumed that the energy from the force of gravity was converted into Earth mass at a rate according to Einstein's formulas E = mc2 and worked backwards using a computer program to do the math. The results correlated almost exactly with the estimated age of our planet.silverfox in [url=http://www.besslerwheel.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=74103#74103]post #74103[/url] wrote:One of the most intriguing of those is the theory of the eminent geologist Warren Carey and some others that the Universe isn't simply expanding at an antomic level but that it is actually physcally and tangibly growing.
The artist Neil Adams has picked up the banner on that and presents a very convincing arguement based on our own planet's somewhat glaring and obvious evidence of it as well as demonstrating that the moon and other planets seem to show the very same thing.
Naturally this also raises some questions about our understanding of gravity.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJfBSc6e7QQ
It seems that the constant force of gravity gets converted into matter according to Einstein's formulas. Water produces more water. Granite produces more granite. Iron produces more iron. Talk about a living Earth!
Why does this happen? It seems that matter shields or stops the omni-directional flow of energy of the universe causing gravity to push us downward on the Earth. This shielded flow of energy gets stopped by matter. The stopped energy resonates at the same frequency as the matter that stopped it and it becomes more matter. Thus the Earth is constantly being created and growing. As it grows its orbit expands. The same happens to all solar systems and galaxies. Thus everything is expanding.
The dinosaurs could grow to such big sizes because of the lower gravity due to a smaller Earth back then.
Someday science might learn the truth, whatever the truth might be. Skeptics seem to slow scientific progress.
But what causes or started the planets and galaxies to spinning? Could it be the same force that could power perpetual motion? After all, the universe is the ultimate perpetual motion machine!
If matter can grow out of nothing (except the flow of forces that produce gravity) then could energy to power a PMM come from the same omni-directional flow of energy?
It is and has been my theory that inertial energy in the form of centrifugal force derived from the energy of the universe is the prime mover of any perpetual motion machine. How does a spinning object know that it is spinning? How does it know how much CF to produce? It is the bumping of molecules against the background energy of the universe that causes CF. Whenever matter or molecules change direction or velocity they bump into the energy of the universe and thus experience inertial resistance and inertial momentum. A perpetual motion machine must harness this energy of the universe.