Chapter X
Astronomical
Applications
In the astronomical world an accurate new theoretical
system of the kind developed in this work has a particularly broad field
of usefulness. Astronomy has always been under a handicap, as compared
with other physical sciences, in that it is almost entirely observational
rather than experimental, and to further complicate matters, the observations
give only what amounts to an instantaneous picture, the changes, if any,
being too small in most instances to be measure able within the period
of time available. Where observations extend over a wide range of distance
it is true that they also extend over a wide range of time, because of
the finite speed of electromagnetic radiation, but this gives us no time
dimension for the individual objects and, in general, evolutionary processes
cannot be observed; they must be inferred. Even where the evidence of
an evolutionary sequence is fairly plain, the direction of the evolution
is rarely indicated in any unequivocal manner, and the astronomer is usually
forced to rely upon collateral information of one kind or another in making
his interpretation of the observations.
The availability of an accurate new physical theory,
developed and verified in other physical fields where the facts are more
readily accessible, now gives astronomy a new source of information which
is not subject to the limitations that are inherent in the procedure that
the astronomer normally employs. All of the features of the RS universe
are purely theoretical products obtained entirely from a development of
the necessary consequences of the postulates of the Reciprocal System
without introducing anything from the observed physical universe or from
any other outside source. The previous pages have shown how the mere existence
of space and time with properties as postulated necessarily leads to the
existence of theoretical entities that are identical with photons of radiation,
atoms of matter, sub-atomic particles, and so on. Further development
of the consequences of the postulates similarly requires the existence
of theoretical entities that we can easily correlate with stars, star
clusters, galaxies, and other features of the astronomical universe, and
it provides us with a complete definition of the theoretical properties
of these entities. In view of the general proof that the theoretical RS
universe is identical with the actual physical universe, it then follows
that these theoretical entities and phenomena deduced from the postulates
are true representations of the corresponding features of the physical
universe. Since the theoretical development is not dependent in any way
on existing observational or experimental knowledge, this conclusion is
valid not only with respect to those features that can be verified by
comparison with data from observation but also with respect to the features
that cannot be so verified.
This new development therefore provides a unique opportunity
of examining the subject matter of astronomy from an outside viewpoint
completely independent of any conclusions that have been reached from
consideration of the results of astronomical observation. In a sense,
this is equivalent to getting a picture of the astronomical universe by
means of a new kind of instrument of exceptional power and versatility.
Like the invention of the telescope, the development of this new and powerful
instrument now gives the astronomer an opportunity to widen his horizons
greatly: to get a clear view of phenomena that have hitherto been hazy
and indistinct, and to extend his investigations into areas that were
totally inaccessible to the instruments previously available.
The picture obtained from this new instrument differs
in many respects from present-day ideasvery radically in some instancesbut
the existence of such differences is clearly inevitable in view of the
limited amount of information available to the astronomers and the consequent
highly tentative nature of much of the astronomical theory currently in
vogue. As has been demonstrated in the preceding pages, the correct explanation
of a physical situation often differs from current ideas to a surprising
degree even where the current theories have been successful enough to
win general acceptance. In astronomy, where comparatively few issues have
actually been settled, and differences of opinion are rampant, it can
hardly be expected that the correct explanation will leave much of the
previous theoretical structure intact.
In accordance with the general plan of this volume, the
discussion of the astronomical situation will be limited to showing the
effect that the new concepts of space and time have an astronomical thought
in general, without going into any more detail than is actually necessary.
It appears that this can best be done by considering two specific examples:
(1) the globular clusters, which we will take as representative of the
class of phenomena for which the previously available data are reasonably
adequate but are erroneously interpreted because of incomplete and misleading
collateral information, and (2) the white dwarf stars, which we will take
as representative of the class of phenomena whose true status cannot be
understood at all without making significant changes in basic concepts.
The globular clusters are by far the most numerous of
the reasonably permanent stellar aggregates. Many galaxies, including
our own, are accompanied by hundreds of these distinctive and conspicuous
objects, and one galaxy, M 87, is reported to have in the neighborhood
of a thousand associated clusters. But fitting these clusters into the
structure of accepted astronomical theory has been a very difficult undertaking,
and as late as 1946 an author was able to say that no one has given
an account of how these clusters must have originated or why they are
found distributed as they are.96 Even today writers not infrequently
repeat Jeans, characterization of these structures as mysterious
objects. Present opinion favors something on the order of an explanation
advanced by Von Weizsäcker in which he postulates that a vast cloud of
dust and gas originally collapsed to form the central regions and disk
of the galaxy and that portions of the material remaining behind in the
outer regions consolidated to form the globular clusters. This view looks
upon the clusters as essentially permanent features of the galaxy.
In the theoretical universe developed from the postulates
of the Reciprocal System, stellar aggregates identical with the globular
clusters also make their appearance, but these clusters originate uniformly
throughout space. Once formed, they are pulled into the galaxies by gravitational
forces. On this basis each of the larger galaxies is necessarily surrounded
by a large number of globular clusters which are simply in the process
of falling into the galaxy. When they reach the galactic disk they will
be broken up by the rotational forces, first into smaller aggregatesgalactic
clustersand finally into individual stars that will be absorbed
into the general structure of the galaxy.
Here we have two very different views as to the origin
and ultimate destiny of the globular clusters, one derived from astronomical
observations interpreted in the light of current cosmological theory;
the other derived from a theoretical system developed in an entirely different
physical field, but presumably applicable to the entire universe. For
convenient reference we will designate these as the CA (current astronomical)
and RS (Reciprocal System) theories respectively. Now let us look at the
evidence, specifically those facts on which the two viewpoints differ,
and which are therefore relevant for the purpose of supporting a decision
as to which viewpoint is more in harmony with existing knowledge.
1. In spite of the observational difficulties involved, a substantial
number of globular clusters have been located in inter-galactic space
in recent years.97 The existence of so many clusters
not associated with galaxies is very awkward for a theory such as CA
which regards these objects as having originated jointly with the galaxies,
and the observed situation is therefore highly favorable to the RS theory,
with which it is entirely in agreement.
2. The cluster system surrounding our galaxy does not participate in
the galactic rotation.98 This is difficult to reconcile
with the CA theory. If the clusters were formed as a part of the galactic
aggregate, then they should act as part of the galaxy and should participate,
at least to some degree, in its motion. On the other hand, the RS theory
says that the clusters are not part of the galaxy but are external objects
that are being drawn in by gravitation. On this basis the reason why
they do not participate in the galactic rotation is obvious.
3. The observed motions of the clusters are, in themselves, practically
conclusive evidence of the validity of the RS theory. As Struve expresses
it, the clusters move much as freely falling bodies attracted
by the galactic center.99 The RS theory says that this is
exactly what they are, and that the observed motions are therefore just
what we should expect. The CA theory views the observed paths as portions
of extremely elongated orbits, but has no explanation as to why the
cluster motion should have this highly abnormal characteristic.
4. Clusters closer to the galactic center are somewhat smaller than
those farther out. Studies indicate a difference of 30 percent between
10,000 parsecs and 25,000 parsecs.100 This is not necessarily inconsistent
with the CA theory, but it is something for which that theory has no
explanation, whereas it is definitely required by the RS theory, as
the clusters are subject to more loss of stars by differential gravitational
forces as they move in closer where those forces are stronger. On the
basis of the CA theory the present distance of a cluster from the galactic
center has no special significance, since the observed position is merely
a point on an orbit, and hence there should be no correlation of distance
with size or any other cluster characteristic.
5. Some clusters (M 67, for example) resemble galactic clusters in
size, shape and location, but resemble globular clusters in the types
of stars which they contain, and therefore have H-R diagrams similar
to those of the globular clusters.101 The existence of hybrid clusters
of this kind is very difficult to account for in terms of the totally
different cluster origins pictured by the CA theory. The RS theory gives
a simple and straightforward explanation. It identifies M 67 and others
with the same general characteristics as former globular clusters, or
parts thereof, which have only recently reached the galactic disk. The
modification of the cluster structure under the influence of the strong
rotational forces of the galaxy is already under way, but the evolution
of the individual stars has not yet gone much beyond the globular cluster
stage. The status of M 67 as a recent arrival in the disk is corroborated
by the fact that, if it is classified as a galactic cluster, it is one
of the most populous of these units and one of the highest above the
galactic plane.
6. The observed motions of the stars in the galactic clusters show
that these groups are not stable and are breaking up at a relatively
rapid rate. The large number of such clusters now in existence in spite
of the short indicated life means that some process of replenishment
of the supply must be operative. The RS theory says that the supply
of galactic clusters is continually being replenished by globular clusters,
which fall into the galaxy and are broken up by the rotational forces.
This is the only adequate explanation that has ever been advanced,
and since the current thinking of the astronomers does not permit them
to accept it (although Bok and Bok, who discuss the question at some
length, concede that it would be tempting to do so) they
are forced to admit that We do not pretend to know from where
the (galactic) clusters came.102
The striking fact is that wherever the data obtained
from observation favor one explanation over the other, they invariably
indicate that the RS theory is correct. Why then do the astronomers persist
in their support of an explanation, which conflicts, with so much of the
available knowledge in their own field? It is true that the astronomical
profession has been inclined to favor theories that envision formation
of galaxies as complete units rather than theories which build them up
by some kind of an aggregation process, but it does not deny the possibility
that the latter may be correct, and it recognizes cosmological theories
incorporating the aggregation hypothesisthe Steady State theory
advocated by the Cambridge group of astronomers, for exampleas legitimate
speculations, hence this preference is not sufficient to explain the blind
allegiance which is given to the CA theory. What has actually happened
is that the astronomers have rejected the evidence from their own observations
and have turned their backs on simple and logical explanations which they
admit they are tempted to accept, solely in order to conform
to an unsupported assumption that has been made by another group of scientists
in another field of science. This is one of the most astounding situations
in all scientific history.
The crucial issue in this case is the direction of stellar
evolution. There is ample evidence to indicate the existence of some kind
of an evolutionary process in which certain characteristics of the stars
change with time, but this evidence, by and large, merely shows that such
an evolutionary pattern exists; it does not identify the direction
of the evolution. There are, however, some purely astronomical methods
by which this direction can be indirectly determined. One of the most
unequivocal and positive answers can be obtained from a study of the galactic
clusters. The evolutionary status of the individual clusters covers practically
the entire known range of stellar types, extending all the way from groups
composed of stars similar to those in the globular clusters (exampleM
67) to clusters composed largely of hot blue and white stars (examplethe
double cluster in Perseus). The question, then, is, Which is the young
cluster and which the old?
We can answer this question by examining the density
of the clusters. There is no doubt but that these galactic clusters are
expanding; the motions are rapid enough to be measured. Their density
is thus decreasing with age. Furthermore, the short lifetimes of the existing
clusters preclude the possibility that either the average size or the
average density of such a cluster as originally formed has changed materially
during the time interval involved. It therefore follows that the clusters
with the higher average density are the younger and those with the lower
average density are the older. Studies show conclusively that the clusters
of the M 67 type have the higher average density,103 hence these are the young clusters
and the clusters of the Perseus type are relatively old. The same studies
also show that the average young M 67 type cluster is located higher above
the galactic plane than the average Perseus type cluster, which is just
what would be expected if these clusters are formed by the disintegration
of globular clusters that fall into the galaxy, in accordance with the
RS theory.
But these simple, straightforward and consistent conclusions
from astronomical evidence are summarily rejected by the astronomers
purely on the ground that they conflict with the physicists
conclusion that the source of energy in the stars is the conversion of
hydrogen to helium. If the physicists theory of stellar energy generation
is correct, the hot blue and white stars must necessarily be relatively
young, since their supply of hydrogen fuel could not last
long at the rate they are emitting energy. On this basis the Perseus type
clusters, which are made up largely of such stars, must be very young.
Many astronomers are not too happy about this conclusion. As expressed
by Bok, It is no small matter to accept as proven the conclusion
that some of our most conspicuous supergiants, like Rigel, were formed
so very recently on the cosmic scale of time measurement.104 But rather than challenge the
conclusions of the physicists, the astronomers have stifled such thoughts,
ignored the evidence from their own field, and meekly acquiesced in the
line of thought dictated by the physicists.
Even if the physicists were able to produce some very
strong evidence in support of their conclusions, such submissiveness on
the part of the astronomers would be surprising enough, but the fact is
that the physicists have no such evidence to offer. The hydrogen conversion
process is pure assumption. There is no actual evidence that such a process
ever takes place in the stars or anywhere else. The unstable isotopes
of hydrogen can be stimulated in such a manner as to cause them to do
rapidly what they will do of their own accord sooner or later in any event,
and the stable isotope can be forcibly alteredthat is, by the expenditure
of energybut there is no observational or experimental justification
for the belief that the stable isotope can be caused to become unstable.
The mere fact that the conversion process would be exothermic, or exoergic,
if it occurred, does not necessarily mean that it will take place spontaneously.
Endothermic processes are familiar features of our physical world. The
controlling factor is the relative probability, not the energy balance,
and, so far as we know, the hydrogen atom is just as probable a structure
as the helium atom under any physical conditions.
The physicists conclusions in this instance have
been based on (1) the difference in mass between four hydrogen atoms and
the one helium atom that would be formed by their combination, a difference
which indicates that the hydrogen conversion process, if it could and
did take place, would furnish at least approximately the kind of a source
of energy that the observed output of radiation from a normal type star
requires, and (2) the lack of any known alternative. If the explanation
thus produced were completely in harmony with the known facts, it might
be quite acceptable in spite of its dubious foundations, at least on a
tentative basis, but even without the direct contradictions that were
discussed earlier, the hydrogen process, as Bok says, does not satisfactorily
explain the enormous energy output of a star like Rigel. E. J. Opik not
only agrees that a more powerful source of energy must be assumed
for the giants, but also questions the applicability of the hydrogen process
to the white dwarfs.105 The strong astronomical evidence
indicating that the direction of stellar evolution is opposite to that
which would necessarily exist if hydrogen is the stellar fuel
merely adds further emphasis to a conclusion that is already implicit
in such shortcomings as those cited by Bok and Opik: the conclusion that
the hydrogen conversion process is not the source of stellar energy.
If we must have a more powerful energy source for the giants,
this can take care of the normal stars as well; we do not need two different
processes.
An explanation of the much different energy generation
process derived from the postulates of the Reciprocal System is beyond
the scope of this volume. The objective of this present discussion is
to show how the theoretical picture of the universe obtained from the
new system exposes the weaknesses of existing theory, clarifies doubtful
points, and enables fitting current astronomical knowledge into a consistent
and logical pattern. The alternative process for generation of stellar
energy, a full description of which has been published elsewhere, is,
of course, entirely in harmony with this new astronomical pattern. It
provides abundant energy not only for the supergiant stars but also for
the novae and supernovae as well, and it results in an evolutionary sequence
that conforms to the astronomical evidence in all respects.
Application of the powerful new RS instrument to such
a study of the globular clusters thus gives us a quite different picture
of these structures and their relation to the astronomical universe in
general. This study also furnishes a demonstration of the second type
of contribution, which the Reciprocal System makes to astronomical knowledge:
the formulation of the new physical concepts that are necessary for the
understanding of certain astronomical phenomena that are otherwise inexplicable.
The answer thus supplied to the hitherto puzzling question as to why these
globular clusters hold together but do not collapse into a single mass
was, however, explained in detail in Beyond Newton, and a
different illustration will therefore be discussed in this work. As a
background for this presentation, let us look at the matter of physical
separation between objects.
If a number of objects that were originally in contact
move outward in space away from each other, they are then separated by
intervals of space. Because of the symmetry of space and time, it is also
possible for objects to move outward away from each other in time, and
as a result of such movement the objects are then separated by intervals
of time. When expressed in this manner, the foregoing statement seems
commonplace enough, but in the first example we say that the objects are
now separated by empty space, and it follows that the second group
of objects are now separated by empty time: a concept which is
likely to seem little short of outrageous to those who are accustomed
to staying within the bounds of conventional thought.
Our initial emotional reactions are, however, definitely
untrustworthy when we are undertaking to examine new ideas. Good scientific
practice requires that we should test these new ideas, if possible,
rather than jump to conclusions without adequate factual grounds. Inasmuch
as the presence of empty time in any material aggregate will have a striking
effect on the properties of such an aggregate, one possible way of testing
the validity of the conclusion as to the existence of empty time is to
look for objects that possess these extraordinary properties. If such
objects can be located, their existence then constitutes strong evidence
in support of the deductions that have been made from the underlying theory.
Since empty time is the antithesis of the empty space
that plays such a prominent role in our local environment, the most likely
place to find empty time is in some distant object existing in relative
isolation; that is, an isolated astronomical object. And in order to be
visible for our examination, such an object will have to be self-luminous.
In other words, we are looking for a special and very peculiar kind of
star. Let us see just what properties this star should have.
By way of contrast, we will look first at the properties
of a star containing a maximum amount of empty space. Such a star has
a very large diameter, a very low density, and because it is radiating
from a surface area that is very large compared to the stellar mass, its
surface temperature is relatively low, giving the star a dull red color.
From these characteristics the star derives its name; it is a red giant,
a member of a stellar class well known to astronomers. If we now substitute
for this maximum amount of empty space an equivalent amount of empty time,
the stellar characteristics are radically changed. Inasmuch as more time,
according to the reciprocal postulate, is the equivalent of less space,
this star has a very small volume and an extremely high density. Since
it is radiating from a relatively small surface area, the surface temperature
is high and the color is blue or white.
Are there any such stars? There are. Millions of them
in our galaxy alone, astronomers estimate, on the basis of the relatively
large number found within the distance at which such objects are visible.
The strange stars known as the white dwarfs have exactly the characteristics
described: small diameter, comparable to that of a large planet, fantastically
high densities, far out of the range of anything known elsewhere in the
universe, and a high surface temperature, giving these stars a white color.
A significant point in this connection is that the order of magnitude
of the maximum deviation of the density of these white dwarf stars from
the normal density of solid matter is just about the same as that of the
maximum deviation of the density of the red giants in the other direction;
that is, the extreme white dwarf contains just about as much empty time
as there is empty space in the extreme red giant, as would be expected
from the space-time symmetry principle.
Of course, present-day physical theory also has an explanation
of sorts for the peculiar characteristics of the white dwarfs. This theory
postulates that the high density of the dwarfs results from a collapse
of the atomic structure that allows the atomic nuclei to pack together
in a solid mass. As brought out in The Case against the Nuclear
Atom, the so-called atomic nucleus is purely fictional,
but even if atoms did have a nuclear structure, current theory has no
plausible explanation of why the collapse occurs. The proponents
of the theory talk vaguely about the lack of support at the center of
the stellar mass after the stars fuel has been exhausted
and the atoms no longer have sufficient kinetic energy to maintain the
normal gaseous relations. But there is no adequate explanation as to why
this situation, even if it did exist, should affect the internal
relations within the atoms. The atoms at the center of the star are subject
to the full pressure due to the weight of the overlying material in any
event, and the exhaustion of the hydrogen fuel, would not
change this situation. Actually the compressive force acting against the
central atoms should be somewhat less at the time of exhaustion of the
hydrogen than it was previously, if the evolution of the star takes place
as assumed, since the superimposed weight would be reduced by the amount
of mass radiated away.
Furthermore, there are other astronomical facts that
even the proponents of the collapse theory admit are irreconcilable
with the theory, on the basis of present knowledge. One of the most obvious
of these is the common occurrence of binary stars, which consist of giant-white
dwarf pairs. If the white dwarf status is the result of advanced age,
as the theory contends, then it is entirely out of order for such a star
to be paired with a theoretically much younger type of star in a combination
whose components, in all probability, must have originated contemporaneously.
An isolated case of this kind might be explained as a freak, but these
giant-dwarf pairs are familiar features of the stellar universe. In view
of its inability to account for such phenomena, together with the complete
lack of any logical explanation as to why there should be any internal
collapse of the atom, the current theory can hardly be considered a satisfactory
product.
The empty time explanation, on the other
hand, is simple and logical, and it agrees with the astronomical observations
easily and naturally. On the basis of this theory, it is not necessary
to postulate any unusual or extraordinary events such as an atomic collapse
to account for the characteristics of the white dwarfs. The very high
density of the dwarfs, this theory says, is exactly the same kind of a
phenomenon as the very low density of the giants, the only, difference
being that the separation between the atoms in one case is in time, while
in the other case it is in space. The giant-dwarf combinations, which
have been such a stumbling block for previous theories are then easily
accounted for, as there is nothing to prevent the simultaneous production
of stars, which differ only in the nature of the separation between the
constituent atoms. Indeed, it will be shown in Chapter XIV that such pairs
are not only possible, but normal developments.
It should also be noted that the currently accepted explanation
is entirely ad hoc. There was no advance intimation in physical
theory of the existence of any such structures as the white dwarfs; on
the contrary, the first reports of the observations made on Sirius B were
met with disbelief, and their validity was conceded only after so much
confirmatory evidence became available that further resistance to recognition
of the facts was virtually impossible. The explanation now in vogue is
not something that developed naturally out of the preexisting structure
of theory; it is simply the best the theorists could do in the way of
meeting an awkward situation which was thrust upon them by the findings
of the men in the observatories. There is no reason to believe that any
such theory as that of atomic collapse would ever have appeared
if the white dwarfs had not first been located by astronomical observations.
On the other hand, it is clear that the postulates of
the Reciprocal System demand the existence of such structures as
the white dwarf stars. As long as material aggregates exist in which the
constituent atoms are separated by empty space, the symmetry principle
makes it impossible to avoid asserting the existence of material aggregates
in which the constituent atoms are separated by empty time. There will
no doubt be a tendency to question the foregoing statement on the ground
that it is a product of hindsight, which is notoriously much more clear
than foresight, but the recognition of inverse relationships of this kind
has been an important feature of the development of the Reciprocal System
and initial presentation of this system in The Structure of the
Physical Universe, published in 1959, contained many predictions
based on this same symmetry principle which asserted the existence of
phenomena then wholly unknown to science.
Some of these predictions have actually been verified
in the meantime. Included among them was one, which required the existence,
somewhere in the universe, of events millions of times more energetic
than the most violent explosions then, known to science. In view of the
radical nature of this prediction and the incredulity with which the astronomers
received it, its subsequent verification is one of the highlights of the
short history of the Reciprocal System, and we are justified in designating
this as number nine in the list of Outstanding Achievements of the system.
In the 1959 publication the exact structure of the compound
motions that constitute the atoms of the chemical elements was worked
out in detail, and the nature of the process by which the more complex
elements are built up from smaller units was determined. Further study
of this process then disclosed that it must ultimately terminate in the
destruction of matter, which reaches a certain limiting degree of complexity.
Since the building-up process is one which continues through time, this
means that there is a limiting age of matter and, in turn, the existence
of such a limit leads to the conclusion that the oldest and largest galaxies
will end their careers in gigantic explosions.
The original text admitted It must be conceded
that this seems rather incredible on first consideration. The explosion
of a single star is a tremendous event; the concept of an explosion involving
billions of stars seems fantastic, and certainly there is no evidence
of any gigantic variety of super-nova with which the hypothetical explosion
can be identified. But the text insisted that these explosions must
nevertheless occur, even though nothing of the kind had ever been identified,
as their existence was an inescapable deduction from the principles
previously established. It also went on to point out that there
actually was one observed phenomenon which could very well be the result
of the kind of an explosion predicted by theory, even though it was not
currently viewed in that light:
In the galaxy M 87, which we have already recognized
as possessing some of the characteristics that would be expected in
the last stage of galactic existence, we find just the kind of a phenomenon
which the theory predicts, a jet issuing from the vicinity of the galactic
center, and it would be in order to identify this galaxy, at least tentatively,
as one which is now undergoing a cosmic explosion, or strictly speaking,
was undergoing such an explosion at the time the light now reaching
us left the galaxy.106
When it was originally published this prediction was
rejected by the astronomers as utterly fantastic; now they are frantically
trying to find an explanation of their own for recently discovered phenomena
of exactly the kind predicted. However incredible the existence of explosions
millions of times more energetic than the super-nova explosions of single
stars may have seemed in 1959, todays observations leave little
doubt but that such phenomena actually exist. Additional studies made
on the jet issuing from M 87, notably by I. S. Shklovsky, have confirmed
the conclusion that this is an actual ejection of fast moving particles,
and have determined that the energy of the jet is enormous. What
is the nature of this phenomenon? Shklovsky asks, and answering
his own question he goes on to say, It would be natural to think
of some explosion of grandiose proportions, exceeding by far even such
exceptional phenomena as supernova outbursts (the energy of this explosion
would exceed that of a supernova by a factor of about 107...).107 But the explosion explanation
was still too radical and Shklovsky gave it scant consideration at the
time. Not until about 1961 was this hypothesis actually taken seriously.
In September of that year a note in the Scientific American reporting
on recent suggestions that galactic explosions might be taking place begins
with this comment:
What is the origin of the prodigious quantities of radio energy
emitted by the radio stars outside the Milky Way? A few years
ago it was generally agreed that the power came from collisions between
galaxies. Since then this explanation has begun to seem more and more
dubious, and radio astronomers are now casting about for another mechanism.
108
Since then the evidence confirming the existence of exploding
galaxies has grown rapidly. A recent report by Allan R. Sandage lists
a number of galaxies from which jets similar to that of
M 87 are issuing, and describes observations on the galaxy M 82 which
are apparently conclusive evidence that the galaxy was the scene
of such an explosion some 1.5 million years ago.109
Observational verification of a prediction that ventured
so far off the beaten track is, of course, a major triumph for the Reciprocal
System, particularly since this conclusion was not the product of a fertile
scientific imagination but was reached by means of logical reasoning from
basic premises established in other fields of science. But this is not
the whole story. The development of the theoretical RS universe did not
stop with the explosion. It went on to determine what happens to the material
scattered by the galactic explosions, and it concluded that, after some
intervening steps, this material manifests itself in the form of the cosmic
rays. All this was brought out in detail in the 1959 publication. Now,
many years later, the astronomers are just getting around to taking suggestions
of this kind seriously. Evidence of a titanic explosion in the nucleus
of a nearby radio galaxy suggests that such events may be responsible
for a large part of the cosmic radiation striking the earth, is
the summary, which introduces Sandages article.
But even though the astronomers are finally arriving
at some of the conclusions that were published in The Structure
of the Physical Universe in 1959, the Reciprocal System is still
one jump ahead of them, as they were unprepared for the discovery of the
exploding galaxies and this discovery has confronted astronomy with a
serious problem in accounting for the origin of the tremendous amounts
of energy generated in these events. As Sandage says, It is obvious
that conventional energy sources are not adequate to explain the phenomena
we are now observing, and some totally new energy principle may have to
be devised. The Reciprocal System is not embarrassed in this way
because it is not, like the astronomers, groping around in the dark trying
to find an explanation for an observed phenomenon. The existence of this
phenomenon was deduced from the fundamental principles of the new system
long before it was verified observationally, and in a deductive process
of this kind the reasons precede the conclusions; they do not have
to be the object of a search after the conclusions are reached. The theoretical
discovery that matter, which reaches limiting values in the centers of
the oldest galaxies would suddenly release an immense amount of energy,
was the basis for the conclusion that these galaxies would explode.
Although neither the astronomers nor the physicists seem
to have recognized the point as yet, this need for a totally new
energy principle cuts the ground out from under the currently accepted
hypothesis that the conversion of hydrogen to helium is the source of
stellar energy. Inasmuch as this conversion process is purely hypothetical,
without any experimental or observational evidence to back it up, the
principal argument in its favor has always been the lack of any alternative
process capable of producing the required amounts of energy. The conclusion
voiced by Opik that we must find a more powerful source of energy
for the giant stars has already seriously weakened this argument, and
Sandages admission that a totally new energy process must be found
to account for the energy output of the galaxies now administers the coup
de grace.
The major problems of astronomy and cosmology, including
the cosmic ray situation, will be discussed later in this volume after
some necessary foundations have been laid, but this present chapter was
placed here in order to introduce the concept of empty time as a typical
and rather striking example of the kind of new concepts which will be
encountered in the subsequent pages, and which must be clearly understood
before the full significance of the theoretical arguments can be grasped.
The concept of empty time is wholly foreign to present-day thought, and
in the context of this structure of thought it seems absurd, but a careful
examination discloses that this impression is created only because the
idea conflicts with some of the usual assumptions as to the nature
and properties of time.
Modern science has sacrificed so many basic principles
for the sake of new physical theories of its own devising that it is now
in a rather poor position to object to any new idea or concept
as a matter of principle. A profession that can give up the concept of
absolute magnitudes for the benefit of Relativity, that can give up the
idea of causality for the benefit of quantum theory, that can give up
the idea of the objective reality of atoms and particles for the benefit
of modern atomic theory, and that can seriously consider giving up the
principle of conservation of matter (or matter-energy) for the benefit
of the Steady State theory of cosmology, can hardly be taken seriously
if it attempts to stand firm on basic principles at this late date. But
the truth is that no basic principles are involved in this case. The new
development simply shows that the prevailing assumption that time is one-dimensional
is erroneous, and that it is actually three-dimensional. Everything else
then follows as a matter of course. The existence of empty time is then
logically possible and a theory incorporating this concept has the same
logical standing as one that conforms to previously existing patterns
of thought.
The next five chapters will introduce a number of new
concepts which are at least as foreign to current thinking as the idea
of empty time, and may even seem more bizarre on first consideration.
Here again, however, the basic situation is the same. On the initial contact
with these ideas they appear strangeweird, perhapsnot because
they are inherently illogical or absurd, but simply because they, like
the idea of empty time, conflict with some of the assumptions concerning
the nature of space and time which have remained unchallenged for so long
that their true status has been forgotten. What is now necessary is to
go back and correct the erroneous basic assumptions and then to adjust
the prevailing directions of thinking accordingly. It should be remembered
in this connection that when there are difficult problems to be solved
some change in existing ideas is imperative, and if the problems
are of long standing, the necessary change is likely to be a major one.
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