All New Universe

  • About
  • The Big Bang Pictorial
  • The Big Bang Book
  • Order
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Downloads
    • Glossary
  • Videos
  • Contact
  • The Big Bang Blog:
  • Assumptions
  • Atoms
  • Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation
  • Dark Energy
  • Singleton
  • On TikTok
  • Public Talks
Home » Space & the Speed of Light Explained

Space & the Speed of Light Explained

October 28, 2004 By Charles Sven

Atom’s energy source explored
Arena of Space Calculated
10/28/2004

Download a PowerPoint Presentation of this Article!
Energy & Arena of Space
Modern studies of the atom’s proton indicate a life expectancy way beyond its current 14 billion year age. Prediction now given to beat least 100,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 years. (A 100,000 trillion times a trillion years.) We need to note also that every measurement of light is consistent – 186,282 miles per second. Both figures are mind numbing in size.

Strike a match ! Light emanates in all directions at this impossible velocity with absolutely no acceleration.

These facts are all we need to analyze the energy source and the size of space, before and after the Big Bang.
Why no one has made the following analysis before now is due to the fact that our technology has provided each fact piecemeal and no one recognized the implications.

Strike a match – such a simple thing – yet how is light possible?
(And without acceleration)
Since light (photons) are emanating at 186,282 m/s., that means something in the atom is moving at that velocity which continues in a straight path when released. (Like striking a match.) With protons living over 14 billion years, how could something fly around within an atom without running down?

No battery can provide such energy without depletion.

We cannot determine this power source in any direct manner. We cannot even look within the atom except by inference. Protons don’t burn up supplying power. Consequently we must infer a power source.

The most probable source is a external energy field surrounding our atom, fueling it, existing at some frequency way beyond our ability to detect. Further, in order for us to have a continuing supply without exhaustion, this field must be immense, running like a electric current undiminished in a super-cooled coil.

So now to supply all the atoms in our Universe, I imagine that if our Universe was the size of a drop of water, the field must be a trillion times this drop – a field not created during the Big Bang.

This power field requires a huge arena of space to contain all the energy necessary to power the atoms plus a sufficient amount necessary to convert into the 100 billion galaxies seen in the night sky using Einstein’s E = mc2 as performed at Stanford.

How to make our Universe – let this energy run every possible pattern till at some point this energy converged to a point that set off the event that we call the Big Bang. – An Explosion In Space !

Conclusion:
The energy source is found in an arena of space that is at least a trillion times the size of our present day Universe. And the speed of light is powered by this same energy source.

Download a PowerPoint Presentation of this Article! Energy & Arena of Space

Go ahead and share...

  • Print
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Filed Under: Articles

Search…

About The Author

"As Galileo changed our understanding of the Solar System, my book changes our understanding of the Universe." ~ Charles Sven

Read More…

Subscribe to My Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to my blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

The Book…

The Big Bang: A Pictorial

Subscribe to My Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to my blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 5 other subscribers

Contact Info

Center of the Universe Publishing Company, Inc.
41242 N. Westlake Avenue
Antioch, Illinois USA 60002

Email: Click Here...

  • About
  • The Big Bang Pictorial
  • The Big Bang Book
  • Order
  • Resources
  • Videos
  • Contact

Copyright © 2025 · AllNewUniverse.com