The Mother Stars

Cosmic Rays

by George B. Davison


Formats

Softcover
$14.95
Softcover
$14.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 9/24/2008

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6.5x9.75
Page Count : 102
ISBN : 9781425122706

About the Book

Pythagoras was first to teach that the Earth is round and rotates on its axis. Followed 200 hundred years later by Aristarchus who developed the method to calculate the distances from Earth to the Sun and the Moon, though not accurately. Democritus correctly theorized matter consisted of atoms, with the properties known now. None of the early Greek teachers connected atoms to stars and planets. Dalton and Rutherford gave an organized concept of the behavior of and structure of atoms. Still there was no unification of atoms to cosmic structures which has come lately as physicists and astrophysicists have begun to complement one another in theory of the nature of cosmos. Concepts and theories arise and fall only concepts and theories that provide practical use remain. Speculation and conjecture are the precursors of evidential reality. In the present theory of the beginning of creation there have been at least two serious challenges, steady state and divinity. There have been versions of how the Big Bang evolved and no real evidence can verify any one system. There is only one theory that explains how the planets evolved: the gas, dust and planetessimal ring accumulation. My Mother Stars is a serious challenge to this widely accepted theory. As to the gravity, graviton theory Roger Penrose calls a Slippery Eel, now considered the force of warped space-time another visit to the nature of the common alternator explains how this EEL lights the Edison eelectric bulb. The electric bridge between Io and Jupiter is another graviton generated force. How do cosmic rays acquire extreme, high energies??? Could gyroscopes and Rubic cubes provide the answer to quantum gravity???


About the Author

George Davison will celebrate his 60th birthday on September 11, 2004 at a special luncheon hosted by his daughter Yolanda, son-in-law David, and grandsons Dane and Robert-Scott Dyche. His daughter Julie, son-in-law Wally, and grandchildren Alex, Kayla and Naomi Kogan live in Florida. George was born on September 15, 1924 in Nogales, AZ. His family moved to Tucson where he attended Tucson High School. He then served in the South Pacific from 1943 to 1945 with the 5th Air Force during WWII Returning to Tucson, he attended the University of Arizona and married (the late) Yolanda Serrano. George worked as a chemist for the AZ Portland Cement Co. He also owned and operated twp Chevron gas stations for many years before retiring. George is an active member of many organizations and volunteers at the St. CyrilÕs Parish Mexican Mass every Sunday. He is a member of Los Decendientes del Precidio, The American Legion, The Veterans of Foreign Wars, the 345th Bomb Group Association, and is a University of Arizona Alumni Emeritus. George is also an avid writer and chef in his spare time. His motto for a long and happy life is ÒEn boca cerrada no entra mosca.Ó