Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Something impossible to imagine. Maybe.

A Photon corkscrewing its way through hydrogen cloud.


This may not be real or true, but it sure sounds good.

The weight of the entire universe is pushing upon itself.
The universe is full of hydrogen molecules, but there is also hydrogen being compressed together by the gravity of planets, and on Earth we see it as clouds, rain, seas and oceans.
Why we can’t see this mist of universal hydrogen, whether we look across a desert, or into outer space, is because light (Photons) uses the hydrogen to move through. It passes through in a straight line. This is why light travels, it is forcing itself to travel from one place to another, because it is a spinning off balanced atom, and because of that unbalanced form, makes it corkscrew its way through the hydrogen.
When we think we have vacuumed all of the atmosphere out of a sphere and there is nothing left inside, we haven’t, there will always be hydrogen left behind.
To be able to remove all the hydrogen, we would need a force greater then the weight of the entire universe that is pushing up against itself, just like, but a million times greater, trying to remove the hydrogen from outer space, as there is no oxygen to assist in its withdrawal.
Imagine that if you could see all the hydrogen around planets and Suns, we would see a sea of mist that only became concentrated the closer it got to a planet.
Without hydrogen, Photons would have nothing to push against and could not travel at all.
Can you see that? Think about a desert mirage on hot desert sand, the light getting to your eyes has been redirected a little because of the rising swirling hydrogen in the air and it is distorting the view. Think about how much force it would take to remove all the water from inside a sphere one mile below the surface of an ocean. To be able to have nothing but nothing inside that sphere would be impossible to achieve.
By Roy Savill.

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