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Speaker:
Yongfeng Yang
Motions of Observable Structures Ruled by Hierarchical Two-body Gravitation in the Universe

Date: 2011-07-16 Time: 07:00 - 09:00 US/Pacific (1 decade 2 years ago)
America/Los Angeles: 2011-07-16 07:00 (DST)
America/New York: 2011-07-16 10:00 (DST)
America/Sao Paulo: 2011-07-16 11:00
Europe/London: 2011-07-16 14:00
Asia/Colombo: 2011-07-16 19:30
Australia/Sydney: 2011-07-17 01:00 (DST)

Where: Online Video Conference
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Description

In the past, various scenarios have been presented to account for the formation of the solar system and our galaxy, but ever-increasing observations prove these conceptions to be incomplete. Here we propose, all objects in the universe are organized in an orderly series of hierarchical two-body systems with gravitation. Within these systems, the two components of each two-body system are orbiting around the barycenter of this system, and at the same time each two-body system is orbiting around the barycenter of a superior two-body system. Based on this hierarchical two-body association, an approximate uniform velocity feature for all stars in a galaxy, and galaxies in a cluster, is determined. Under the effect of gravitation, a successive hierarchical orbital shrinkage results in high redshifts of distant galaxies and planar (disc) rotational profile of large-scale structures like the solar system and galaxy.

?? if redshift are not primarily due to velocity shift ? the velocity-distance relation is linear, the distribution of the nebula is uniform, there is no evidence of expansion, no trace of curvature, no restriction of the time scale ? and we find ourselves in the presence of one of the principles of nature that is still unknown to us today ? whereas, if redshifts are velocity shifts which measure the rate of expansion, the expanding models are definitely inconsistent with the observations that have been made ? expanding models are a forced interpretation of the observational results? -- E. Hubble