In the various discussions on the interior of planets, some moons, it is noted that 3x range matter gradually slows back down.
Why does that happen? Should not the progression keep 3x motion as such for precisely the same reasons that inwardly gravitating matter continues inward?
In the thread on the Searl effect, and the couple articles on co-magnetism, it was mentioned that once established, co-magnetism should continue indefinitely if considered in conception. Is that a different beast from 3x matter in it's behavior?
Why does 3x range motion decay?
Insides and outsides
You are on different sides of the unit boundary. Gravitation is due to rotation inside the time region, basically in its own little universe. Ultra-high speed motion (3-x) is external to the time region--a property of the aggregate, not the atom, and as such, is not "pure" inward motion--it has all sorts of other components affecting it, such as collision with other matter, electric, thermal and magnetic ionization, etc.Why does that happen? Should not the progression keep 3x motion as such for precisely the same reasons that inwardly gravitating matter continues inward?
Now gravitation also breaks down inside the time region as well. We call that property, "heat." That is why we have states of matter (solid, liquid, vapor, gas)--that "looseness" between atoms is due to the gravitational attracting breaking down in one or more scalar dimensions.
Comagnetism is a different situation in that it is a product of ionization, not gravity. See Nehru's paper on sunspots, which is where the concept of comagnetism came into being.In the thread on the Searl effect, and the couple articles on co-magnetism, it was mentioned that once established, co-magnetism should continue indefinitely if considered in conception. Is that a different beast from 3x matter in it's behavior?
Every dogma has its day...