Chapter XIV
The Other Half
According to the theory developed from the postulates
of the Reciprocal System, the destinies of the physical universe as a
whole are controlled by two powerful and antagonistic forces: the force
of the space-time progression, which carries all of the objects of our
environment outward away from each other and tends to disperse these objects
throughout space, and the force of gravitation, which moves every unit
of mass inward toward all other masses, and tends to consolidate these
masses into a single aggregate. Because of the dependence of the gravitational
force on distance, the actual result is a compromise. Beyond the gravitational
limits of the largest material aggregates the space-time progression holds
sway, and the distant galaxies are receding from us and from each other
with tremendous speeds. Inside the gravitational limits the gravitational
forces are slowly but inexorably pulling all matter into larger and larger
aggregates.
We have visible evidence of both processes. The red
shift of the spectra of the distant galaxies enables measurement
of their outward velocities. Similar observations on the globular clusters
surrounding our Milky Way galaxy show that these cIusters are in the process
of falling into the galaxy, and we can deduce that the cIusters that are
observed in similar positions and similar numbers around other spiral
galaxies are doing the same. As would be expected, the larger galaxies
are not only capturing star clusters but also small galaxies, and we find
such satellites, in the immediate vicinity of many of the
larger units. Furthermore, astronomical observations reveal that there
are many galaxies which are actually in contact, which means that they
are in the act of combining, and the internal structures of many other
large galaxies indicate that similar combinations have taken place at
some time in the past.
The course of events indicated by the RS theory, and
strongly supported by observational data, is that cIusters of starsglobular
clustersare formed by condensation of dust and gas somewhat uniformly
throughout space and are pulled in toward each other by gravitational
forces. The rate of aggregation speeds up as the size of the aggregates
increases, since a combination of two clusters has twice the pulling power
of a single cluster and the volume of space within the gravitational limits
increases even more rapidly. Pairs of globular clusters become small galaxies,
small galaxies become large galaxies, and large galaxies become giants.
In the meantime a similar process of aggregation has
been under way in the vicinity of the stars of which the clusters and
the galaxies are constructed. A very substantial part of the total mass
of the universe, perhaps as much as half, exists in the form of dust and
gas. All diffuse material of this kind that is within the gravitational
limits of the individual stars is continually being drawn in toward those
stars, and that which is outside these limits will sooner or later come
within the gravitational reach of some star because it is being pulled
in toward the stars by the gravitational attraction of the galaxy as a
whole. Current astronomical opinion tends to minimize the importance of
dust and gas accretion in the life cycle of the stars, although some prominent
astronomers, Fred Hoyle,119 for example, have contended that
it plays a very significant role, and G. J. Whitrow reports that Many
students of the subject believe that this (accretion) is essentially the
mechanism by which all large aggregates of matter, such as galaxies, have
been generated.120
The theoretical situation is very clear, and is
in full agreement with Whitrows statement. The average star in the
RS universe is continually growing by reason of this accretion of dust
and gas. Some of the stars in the relatively dust-free independent globular
clusters and small galaxies may be merely holding their own, or even losing
a little mass by reason of an excess of radiation over accretion, but
the big spiral galaxies are pulling in clouds of dust and gas as well
as stars and star clusters, and with so much food available,
the stars in these galaxies are growing at a relatively rapid rate.
All this would seem to point toward an eventual condition
in which all matter would be gathered into giant galaxies composed of
giant stars and separated by almost infinitely great distances. The theoretical
development reveals, however, that such a state can never be reached,
as there are factors, which limit the size of both stars and galaxies.
A full discussion of this situation is beyond the scope of this present
volume, but in brief, the existence of these limits is a consequence of
increases in the magnitude of certain forces, which are directly related
to the basic structure of the atom. These forces increase as the stars
and galaxies grow older and larger, and they ultimately become strong
enough to destroy the structures of the atoms that make up these physical
aggregates. Size itself is not the crucial factor, but the limits for
both stars and galaxies are related to the size.
In the star it is the build-up of thermal energy in the
form of ionization and translational atomic motion that ultimately neutralizes
a unit of the one-dimensional rotation of the atom and causes the catastrophic
event known as a supernova, in which the star undergoes a gigantic explosion.
Here the limit is reached at a particular size because the aggregate becomes
hotter as it grows larger, a natural result of generating energy by processes
which are roughly proportional to the cube of the diameter (the mass)
and dissipating it by processes which are proportional to the square of
the diameter (the surface area).
The theoretical development tells us that the larger
part of the mass of a star, which becomes a supernova, is dispersed into
the surrounding space by the explosion. This conclusion is quite orthodox
and it is confirmed by the existence of expanding clouds of diffuse matter,
which have apparently been produced by explosions of this kind. The Crab
Nebula is a familiar example. But the new theory also leads to the very
unorthodox conclusion that the remainder of the mass of the star is accelerated
to speeds exceeding that of light and is dispersed into time rather than
into space. As brought out in Chapter X, there is also ample observational
evidence available to confirm this aspect of the theoretical deductions,
when the observational data is taken at its face value and is freed from
the illegitimate interpretations that have been placed upon it in order
to force the observed facts into conformity with currently accepted ideas.
After the expansive forces have been spent, the ever-present
force of gravitation reasserts itself and the material that was dispersed
into space gradually pulls together to form a new star. Meanwhile, exactly
the same thing is happening to the material that was dispersed into time,
except that in pulling this material together, the gravitational force
is reducing the amount of empty time between these particles, instead
of reducing the amount of empty space between the particles as
it does in the case of the matter that was dispersed outward. In each
instance the contracting mass of material attains a stellar temperature
before the work of gravitation is complete, and the initial product of
the process is therefore a double star in which one component is a red
giant, a star in which the constituent particles are separated by a large
amount of empty space, and the other is a white dwarf, a star in which
the constituent particles are separated by an equally large amount of
empty time. Further contraction of these stars, in space and in time respectively,
ultimately eliminates the empty space and empty time and brings both stars
to positions on the main sequence, which they approach from opposite directions.
While the contraction process is going on, and during
residence on the main sequence after contraction is complete, each star
continues accretion of material from its surroundings, and this process
of growth culminates in another supernova explosion. Thus, even though
the maximum size of the individual stars is limited, increase ingage results
in the formation of more and larger multiple star systems. In older galaxies
and in the older regions of our own galaxy we can expect that there will
be many systems similar, for example, to Castor, which has at least six
components.
Although the foregoing description of the stellar evolutionary
cycle is a purely theoretical series of conclusions derived, like all
of the other conclusions of the work, entirely from a development of the
consequences of the Fundamental Postulates of the Reciprocal System, there
is ample opportunity to check the various features of the theoretical
cycle against the results of observation. There are many gaps in the observational
data, and it is not possible to check all of the theoretical deductions,
but a great deal of information is available from observation and all
of this information is in agreement with the theory as outlined or, at
least, is not inconsistent with the theory. The new picture conflicts
with other theories, of course. The evolutionary path of the stars
in the theoretical RS universe is altogether different from that envisioned
by present-day astronomersin fact, the direction of evolution in
the new system is directly opposite to that assumed in current theorybut
current ideas on this score are definitely unreliable. As was pointed
out in Chapter X, they rest entirely on a wholly unsupported assumption
as to the source of stellar energy, and they are specifically contradicted
by many items of evidence from astronomical sources. Thus, while the concept
of a stellar thermal limit, the particular item with which we are concerned
at the moment, is new to science, it is soundly based and well substantiated.
At this point it is again appropriate to call attention
to the logical position which the new theoretical system occupies in such
observationally uncertain fields as astronomy. A great deal of progress
has been made in astronomy and astrophysics, particularly in the last
few decades, but there are still immense vacant spaces in the accumulated
body of astronomical knowledge and comparatively few of the conclusions
that have been reached in this field can be regarded as anything more
than tentative. Leading figures in the profession are continually warning
their colleagues against placing too much trust in current theories. Harlow
Shapley, for instance, emphasizes the tentative nature of our astronomical
theories and tells us that observation are still too scanty
for confidence that our interpretations are durable.121 W. J. Luyten similarly warns
that We must also be rather careful not to place too much confidence
in our many current, but often shaky, theories.122 The gist of these warnings is
that present-day astronomical theory should not be mistaken for
knowledge.
On the other hand, the conclusions of the Reciprocal
System in the astronomical field are not subject to any more than that
minor degree of uncertainty that applies to all human knowledge. They
are direct deductions from general principles whose validity has been
established in many physical fields where the facts are readily accessible
and incontestable, and they do not depend in any way on the scope or accuracy
of astronomical observations. Unless some error has been made in the deductive
reasoning by which the detailed conclusions were reached from the pertinent
general principles, the astronomical picture obtained from the Reciprocal
System is therefore necessarily correct. The possibility of an error in
the deductive process cannot be completely ruled out, of course, but where
the chain of reasoning is short, as in this case, a serious error is not
likely, and in the absence of any specific and definite conflict with
observational information there is an overwhelming probability that the
conclusions reached by the new system correctly represent the true physical
facts. Any conflicts with currently accepted theories are wholly irrelevant
in this connection in view of the admittedly uncertain and tentative nature
of these theories.
A recognition of the status of the Reciprocal System
as a fully integrated unit whose validity has been established in other
physical fields and which is therefore independent of the current state
of knowledge in the particular field to which it is being applied is more
essential than ever when we turn to a consideration of the magnetic analog
of the thermal limit in the stars, the limit of magnetic ionization, not
because the conflicts with existing theory are any more numerous or more
serious here than elsewhere, but because in this field there are no existing
theories. Neither physical nor astronomical theory even recognizes the
existence of magnetic ionization, to say nothing of the relation of this
ionization to atomic weight, the existence of an ionization limit, the
effects of this limit, and the other related items that are discussed
in this volume and its predecessors. The important point to recognize
here is that regardless of the present state of observational knowledge,
the section of the new theoretical structure which is applicable to these
particular phenomena participates in the proof of the validity of the
system as a whole. When we have established the accuracy of our aerial
map by checking it against the known facts in the areas that are accessible,
we then know that the map gives us a true picture in any sub-area that
may happen to be inaccessible. The same is true of the Reciprocal System.
Like the aerial map, this system can be tested as a complete unit, and
when we have established its accuracy as a whole, we have also established
its accuracy in each separate area, regardless of whether or not we are
able to verify the conclusions in all areas individually.
We have already seen, in the preceding chapter, how the
magnetic ionization level builds up as the age of matter increases. This
build-up cannot continue indefinitely, however, as the ionization adds
mass to the atom, and the total mass that an atom can have is limited.
The reasons for this limitation are too involved for discussion in this
general survey, but such a discussion is hardly necessary for present
purposes since the existence of such a limit is an observed fact. Beyond
uranium, the last of the elements which occur naturally on the earths
surface, the artificial production of new elements is meeting increasingly
greater difficulties as each additional step is taken and it is evident
that a limit is being approached. When the oldest material in a galaxy,
which will normally be concentrated near the galactic center, reaches
this limit, this matter will disintegrate in a manner similar to that
in which part of the matter of a star disintegrates when it reaches the
thermal limit. Since a large amount of nearby matter is close to the limit
when the first such disintegrations occur, the surrounding material is
brought up to the limit by the ejections from the first explosion and
once initiated, the explosion ultimately involves all or most of the galaxy.
In order to clarify the nature and results of the kind
of an explosion that takes place here, it is advisable to consider the
relations between the several major regions of the universe in more detail.
These regions are shown graphically, in a linear sequence, in Fig. 3.
At one end we have the time region, in which n units of time are
associated with one unit of space, and hence all motion is in time. Next
is the time-space region, in which n units of time are associated
with m (a smaller number) units of space. Then comes the space-time
region, in which n units of space are associated with m units of time,
and finally the space region, in which n units of space are associated
with one unit of time.

Fig.3
The ratio of space to time in this diagram increases
from left to right. At the extreme left time is infinite, space is unity,
and velocity is zero. At the borderline between the time and time-space
regions time has decreased to unity, space remaining constant, and velocity
is therefore unity in one dimension. As we continue toward the
right through the time-space region, the amount of space increases in
the other dimensions, and at the center of the diagram the velocity is
unity in all three dimensions. The right half of the diagram is a duplicate
of the left half in inverse order, beginning with unit reciprocal velocity,
passing through the space-time region, where time decreases until at the
region boundary it is only sufficient to attain unit reciprocal velocity
in one dimension, and then through the space region to the extreme right
where time is unity, space is infinite, and reciprocal velocity is zero.
In the time-space region, the region of our everyday
experience, the progression of space is outward (toward infinity) and
since outward in space is equivalent to inward in time, the equivalent
progression of time is inward. In the space-time region these directions
are, of course, reversed. A similar reversal takes place at the boundary
of the time region. Beyond this boundary space remains constant and only
time increases. This is equivalent to a decrease in space. An increase
in space in the space region, with time remaining constant, is likewise
equivalent to a decrease in time.
The progression does not actually undergo a change in
direction. It originates anew at every space-time unit, and the
directions in which it originates are different in the individual regions.
Gravitation must follow suit, as it is inherently a motion in opposition
to the progression. But this fixed relation to the progression is not
shared by independent motions. If an object enters the time region with
an inward motion in space which it acquired in the time-space region,
it still continues with the equivalent of an inward motion in space
here where actual space motion is not possible; that is, it moves outward
in time.
With the benefit of the foregoing explanation we are
now able to analyze the effects of the two types of astronomical explosions.
The explosion of the star is due to reaching the lower limit of
matter: the destructive limit in one dimension. Here the increase of thermal
motion and positive ionization, both of which are space displacements,
forces the net time displacement down to zero. This is the boundary between
the time region and the time-space region of our everyday experience.
When the ensuing explosion occurs, part of the material of the star is
ejected forward into the time-space region to form the familiar
outward expanding cloud of dust and gas, and part is ejected backward
into the time region. This later material expands outward into time, but
since all of this time motion takes place in the same units of space in
which it originates, the matter remains localized in space, and it ultimately
regains stellar status as a white dwarf star.
The magnetic ionization, on the other hand, adds to the
net time displacement rather than decreasing it. This ionization therefore
pushes the net total displacement up to the upper limit of matter.
When the explosion occurs and a substantial part of the mass of the galaxy
is transformed into kinetic energy, the ejected material is at a space-time
level near the boundary between the time-space region and the space-time
region. If the amount of matter involved is relatively small, as in the
case of terrestrial radioactivity, the products attain very high velocities
but remain in the time-space region. In the galactic explosion, where
a tremendous amount of matter is involved, the velocities are much greater
and, as in the case of the supernova explosion, the ejected material is
distributed to both sides of the boundary. That which is ejected backward
into the timespace region moves outward in space and manifests itself
as a visible cloud of particles, such as the jets issuing from the central
regions of M 87 and a number of other galaxies. That which is ejected
forward into the space-time region similarly moves outward in time. But
unlike the time region, into which the products of the super nova explosion
are dispersed, the space-time region is not localized in space, and the
high-velocity products of the galactic explosion therefore pass completely
out of our material universe.
Now let us ask, What becomes of this material? It may
seem a rather nebulous undertaking to attempt to follow the purely theoretical
products of a theoretical process into an observationally inaccessible
region, but the Reciprocal System recognizes no limits other than the
limits of the physical universe itself. However inaccessible the space-time
region may be to observation, it is just as accessible to theoretical
development as the region in which the familiar phenomena of our experience
are located.
The reciprocal principle tells us that for every entity
and every phenomenon of our material universe there is another, which
is identical in every respect except that space and time are interchanged.
All of the features of our material universe belong on the left side of
Fig. 3 in the time region and the time-space region. The corresponding
regions on the opposite side of the centerline contain exactly the same
features in reverse. What we call the material universe is therefore only
half of the total; it is one sector of the universe as a whole.
There is another half, which we will call the cosmic sector, that
is the mirror image of the material sector.
There may be some question as to why an adjective like
cosmic was selected to designate the phenomena of the second
half of the universe rather than non-material, which is a
seemingly obvious choice since present usage practically forces us to
call our familiar half the material sector. It appears likely
that the use of the term non-material would lead to confusion, as
some of the entities normally considered non-material are definitely part
of the material sector of the universe as herein defined. The neutrino
is a good example. There is also an element of convenience in using a
special adjectives such as cosmic inasmuch as we will be able
to identify the phenomena of the cosmic sector, very few of which have
names of their own, by the names of the corresponding phenomena of the
material sector with the addition of the word cosmic. Thus
the analog of matter in the cosmic sector will be known as cosmic matter,
abbreviated c-matter. Use of the expression non-material matter,
on the other hand, would be rather awkward.
With this understanding of the general situation in the
cosmic sector of the universe, let us now return to the material, which
was hurled across the boundary into this sector by the galactic explosion.
The structures of which this material is composed are entirely foreign
to their new environment and hence they are very subject to change. To
illustrate the kind of a situation that exists here we may consider the
status of a small mass of high temperature gas released into a low temperature
environment. A high temperature is not inherently any less probable than
a low temperature, but it is less probable in a low temperature environment,
and hence this gas immediately begins to lose heat and to move toward
thermal conformity with its surroundings. The material atoms are compound
motions and they do not respond to changes in environment as readily as
the simple thermal motion, but the same principles apply, and when these
atoms arrive in the cosmic environment they immediately begin losing or
gaining motions of such a nature as to bring them into harmony with their
surroundings. This means, in short, that they are quickly converted into
structures of the cosmic type. Such conversion is always possible because
all physical structures, both material and cosmic, are composed entirely
of units of space and units of time, and as long as enough units are available
there is always a process or combination of processes by which any structure
can be converted into any other structure. As a result of the entry of
the material explosion products, therefore, a quantity of new cosmic matter
is formed in the cosmic sector.
This cosmic matter is the inverse of the corresponding
feature of the material sector of the universe. Corresponding to the atoms
of ordinary matter, which are linear vibratory space displacements rotating
with displacement in time, there are cosmic atoms, which are linear vibratory
time displacements rotating with displacement in space. As there are material
sub-atomic particles, similar to the material atoms except that they have
effective rotational displacement in only one or two dimensions, so there
are cosmic sub-atomic particles that bear the same relation to the cosmic
atoms. And just as the addition of rotational vibration to the material
atoms and particles generates material isotopes, ions, and other charged
particles, so similar additions to the cosmic atoms and particles generate
cosmic
The new c-matter is widely dispersed initially, but the
cosmic atoms are subject to mutual gravitational forces and to the gravitational
attraction of previously existing aggregates of c-matter. Both of these
operate to draw the particles closer together in time, as gravitation
in the space-time region is directed inward in time rather than inward
in space. The particles of c-matter thus ultimately condense into cosmic
stars, the stars gather in clusters, the clusters combine into cosmic
galaxies, and the galaxies grow into larger galaxies. In the meantime
the cosmic stars of which the galaxies are composed have been reaching
the thermal limit and exploding, producing increasingly large multiple
star systems, and the cosmic magnetic ionization in the central regions
of the older galaxies has been steadily rising. Finally a giant old cosmic
galaxy, a cosmic replica of M 87, reaches the magnetic limit, explodes,
and hurls the greater part of its substance across the boundary line into
the time-space region.
The theoretical discovery of this second half of the
physical universe, a finding which, in one stroke, doubles the size of
the already vast cosmos, is unquestionably one of the Outstanding Achievements
of the present work, and it will be number thirteen on our list. Here
again it should be remembered that this is not a wild speculation or an
ad hoc postulate; it is a necessary and unavoidable consequence
of the Fundamental Postulates of the Reciprocal System, and it participates
in the proof of the validity of that system as a whole. Since the system
is valid in general, it is valid in every part, because it is a single
integral unit, not, like present-day physical science, a collection of
individual theories.
One of the important consequences of the new findings
is that they provide a definite answer to the hotly debated question as
to whether the universe is evolving or whether it is in a steady
state. The conclusion of the new system is clear and unequivocal.
The expansion of the material galaxies carries all of the matter in the
universe outward toward infinite space. But no galaxy can continue moving
outward indefinitely. There is a limit to its age, and hence to its outward
travel. When this limit is reached the galaxy is destroyed, and the matter
of which it was composed has to begin anew in the opposite sector. Here
it will ultimately become a part of a system of cosmic galaxies, equal
in all respects to the material system, but expanding in time rather than
in space and thus carrying all of its constituent units outward toward
infinite time, which is equivalent to zero space. Here again there is
a limit, and when a cosmic galaxy reaches this limit it, too, is destroyed,
and the material of the galaxy is transferred back to the opposite sector
to start the process all over again. The movement inward toward zero space
in one sector cancels all that was accomplished by the movement toward
infinite space in the other sector. Thus the universe is always changing,
yet always remains the same. It is in a steady state.
Existing ideas as to the nature of this steady state
must, however, be modified substantially. There are two major objections
to the steady state hypothesis in the form in which it has been presented
by its principal advocates, the Cambridge group of astronomers. First,
it violates the conservation principles by postulating the continual creation
of matter ex nihilo (out of nothing).Second, it is internally inconsistent,
inasmuch as the oldest galaxies are continually growing older and larger,
which contradicts the principle that the universe always looks the same
from any point in time: an essential feature of the postulated steady
state. Hoyle attempts to explain this contradiction on the basis that
the older galaxies disappear over the time horizon because
of the recession phenomenon, and consequently the age of the oldest galaxy
within observational range will always remain essentially the same.123 But this explanation is satisfactory
only up to the time that our own galaxy becomes the oldest one within
observational range. Beyond that time the age of the oldest galaxy in
this region of space continually increases, which is directly contrary
to the basic hypothesis.
The Reciprocal System disposes of both of these objections
simultaneously, as it sets a limit on the age and size of the galaxies,
and in so doing it replaces continuous creation of matter with a cyclic
process in which the matter from which new galaxies are formed is derived
indirectly from the disintegration of the galaxies that reach the end
of their life spans. As explained earlier, the matter propelled into the
cosmic sector by the violent explosions of the oldest material galaxies
is converted into cosmic matter and becomes the raw material from which
new physical structures are formed in the cosmic environment. The explosions
of the mature cosmic galaxies maintain the equilibrium between the two
sectors by ejecting an equivalent quantity of cosmic matter back into
the material sector. Here the same kind of a process takes place. The
cosmic matter is quickly converted to ordinary matter and it then constitutes
the raw material from which new physical structures are constantly being
formed in the local environment to maintain the steady state. In the next
chapter some of the details of the conversion process will be examined.
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