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gyroscopic gravity
Shambolic wrote:
[Where have you read/heard the term "gyroscopic gravity"?]
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At the University.
Consider this:
Where our sidereal system is situated in the galaxy, (33,000 light years from the galactic centre) we are moving at 500,000 mph in the direction in which the cartwheel is taking us.
That distance from the centre is so great however, and the time taken to circumnavigate the galaxy (226 million years,) is so colossal, that if you were able to look down upon it with the naked eye, you could not see it moving, and yet locally ( where the stars and planets are) that velocity is real, and the effects of it are real.
That velocity, the rotation of the cartwheel, is stage one of the giro (the principal)
Look at the galaxy in a different light - as a massive centrifuge. If you dropped something with mass into it, that mass, in normal circumstances should immediately be thrown to the outer shell, but seeing that the galaxy has no shell, that mass should be flung out into the infinity of space. But this is not so. Something prevents that from happening. What is it - It is the other stages that make up the gyro. Something that happens locally. Something that harnesses the velocity of the principal and causes an interaction to take place. That interaction takes place wherever a sidereal system happens to be.
While our sidereal system is being carried around the galaxy at the velocity of the principal, our planet is in motion around our star at 78,000 mph over a period of 365 +1/4 days. 25% of that time it is traveling in the same direction as the rotation of the galaxy, and the remainder of time it it traveling in opposite directions, setting up stage two of the giro. Stage three, the final stage, is the rotation of the Earth , once again creating pro and opposite directions in relation to the direction of galactic motion, and its orbit around our star as it rotates on its axis every 24 hours.
That creates the gyroscope and the gravity what keeps us in place. Gyroscopic gravity.
Our Galaxy is full of countess billions of these gyros, all contributing to the stability of the galactic structure.
This is one reason that Astronomers believe life is elsewhere in our Galaxy, because we know there are myriads of sidereal systems, and now we are finding them everywhere.
Glactus
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You are a child of the Universe, no less than the trees and the stars
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