Helen Fryman (tuppence@ns.net), with Barry Setterfield (barry@setterfield.org)
February 26, 2001
The following is a simple
explanation of the Setterfield cDK hypothesis intended for teens and
undergraduate non-physics majors. Because it is a simplified explanation, there
is no formal referencing. Referenced papers from which this is taken are
available here: http://ldolphin.org/setterfield/index.html
or http://setterfield.org/.
THE EXPANDED UNIVERSE
Both the secular 'Big Bang'
(or Big Expansion) model and the Bible agree that the universe has been
stretched out. Although there is good evidence that this expansion is no longer
taking place, that is not what we will discuss at first here. What we need to
review is the effect of that expansion.
Blow up a balloon, or stretch
out a rubber band. At first the elasticity is strong and the amount of potential
energy it has is at a maximum for that particular thing. When that balloon pops,
or that rubber band is released, all the potential energy stored in the
stretching becomes immediately released as kinetic, or active, energy. But
should that stretched rubber band or that blown up balloon be left for awhile,
the rubber would begin to relax, losing its elasticity and simply remaining in a
stretched-out condition.
Where did the energy go in the
latter case? As the rubber relaxed, the potential energy was actually
transformed into active, or kinetic energy, and released into the surrounding
air. However the amount of energy was so small compared to the volume of air
into which it was dispersed, that it was impossible to discern a difference in
the air.
THE 'VACUUM' OF SPACE AND ZPE
We can apply this same idea to
the universe itself. However first of all, we need to correct a common
misconception. We have a tendency to think of space as an empty or true vacuum.
As it turns out, however, that is not the case. Even 'empty' space is filled
with all types of radiation, virtual particles, Planck particles, and perhaps
even more energy or particles than we are aware of at the present time. This is
one reason you will hear the phrase 'fabric of space' being used by some. Space
- out there - is simply not an 'empty' thing.
With this in mind, it might be
a little easier to understand the idea that when space itself was stretched out,
there was a tremendous amount of potential energy locked up in the stretching.
Through time, just as with the rubber band or the balloon, this stretching has
gradually relaxed (which is different from 'going down'), thus releasing steady
amounts of energy into space itself.
Is there any evidence of this?
Yes, there is. It has been known for some time that electrons, and all atomic
particles, 'jiggle,' or vibrate rapidly, even at absolute zero temperature. This
vibration can be measured. The measurement does not take place directly, but
takes place the same way we can measure Brownian motion, when a drop of colour
is gently placed in a glass of cold water. Gradually the colour will disperse
although every effort to keep the water still has been made. Motion exists down
to the smallest levels and can be measured by its effects on other things. The
measure of the motion of electrons is referred to as Planck's Constant, even
though it has been shown not to be constant. It has been measured as
systematically increasing over the last century, thus indicating that there has
been an increase in energy affecting the electron. This energy is not coming
from any 'known' source, but seems intrinsic to space itself. This energy,
because it can be seen to be effective at absolute zero, is thus logically
called 'zero point energy,' or ZPE. Setterfield's theory is that this is the
energy being slowly but steadily released from the fabric of stretched space
itself.
QUANTISATION
Now, we need to jump subjects
for a second to provide another picture of something that is happening. Do this
if you like, or simply imagine it, as you have probably done something like it
before: put a glass full of water on a table top. Using as steady an amount of
energy as you can control yourself to do, start gently pushing that glass. At
first it will not move. Then as the pressure builds up, it will jerk forward a
bit and stop. As the pressure from your hand continues, it will jerk forward
again a bit. If you were to measure the places on the table where the glass is
in time, your measurements would show that jerk - you would not have a smooth
'smear' of measurements across the table.
For instance, if you were to
have used enough force to smoothly move that glass across the table, your
measurements would show something like this:
|
TIME |
DISTANCE |
|
1 second |
1/2 inch |
|
2 seconds |
1 inch |
|
3 seconds |
1 1/2 inches |
|
4 seconds |
2 inches |
|
4 1/2 seconds |
2 1/4 inches |
|
5 seconds |
2 1/2 inches |
|
51/2 seconds |
2 3/4 inches |
|
6 seconds |
3 inches |
|
7 seconds |
3 1/2 inches, and so on. |
However, if the force from
your hand was gentle compared to the resistance of the glass, then the jerking
would show up something like this:
|
TIME |
DISTANCE |
|
1 second |
1/2 inch |
|
2 seconds |
1/2 inch |
|
3 seconds |
1 1/2 inches |
|
4 seconds |
1 1/2 inches |
|
41/2 seconds |
2 1/4 inches |
|
5 seconds |
2 1/4 inches |
|
5 1/2 seconds |
2 3/4 inches |
|
6 seconds |
2 3/4 inches |
|
7 seconds |
3 1/4 inches |
This second measurement table
shows what are referred to as 'quantised measurements.' The measurements are
clumping together in identifiable groups, unlike the first set of measurements.
This is what the term 'quantised measurements' refers to and this will be
important later on, too.
Now, let's go back to outer
space. We know that there are certain laws of motion that we can count on.
Things remain the way they are until enough force is exerted on them to cause a
change of speed, or direction, or both. So if there is energy actually being
released into space from the potential energy caused by the expansion of the
universe, then we should see two things: first we should see any actual
measurements of energy show a smooth increase in measurements. Secondly, we
should see quantised measurements regarding the effects of this increased
energy. That is like your hand and the glass. We could measure the output of
energy/pressure from your hand, and the increase in energy released would be
smooth. But the effects of that energy - the glass jerking across the table,
will be quantised. We should, then, see this quantised effect in the mass of the
universe itself, as any energy coming from the mass should show jerks in
measurements.
It appears that this may be
precisely what we are seeing.
QUANTISATION AND REDSHIFT
The glass on the table was a
good picture of resistance to force and then the response when that force built
up. With the glass, the resistance was friction. However, when we move down to
the atomic scale, which we must do when considering the speed of light and the
fabric of space, we are no longer dealing with friction. What we are dealing
with is the kinetic, or expressed, energy of the electron itself. This kinetic
energy is maintained until enough force or energy is applied to jerk it out of
its previous pattern, forcing it into a new one. We should see evidence of this
in the light emitted from the atoms if this is truly happening.
Here's a bit more foundation
again, so you can understand what is happening. The light we see is part of the
entire electromagnetic spectrum. This spectrum is made up of a series of wave
lengths, and in the visible part of the spectrum, every colour we see is a
different wavelength from every other colour. At the one end of this rainbow,
the red colour has relatively long wavelengths, and as we progress down the
rainbow of colours to blue and then purple, the wavelengths get shorter and
shorter. The longer the wavelength, the lower the energy of the electron which
caused the light to be emitted.
When astronomers look at a
star, they see the light which was emitted by that star some time ago. It took
time for that light to reach us. In other words, when we look at distant stars,
we are looking back in time. There is no disagreement that the farther the star,
the further back in time we are looking. But there is something happening with
the light that needs explanation. We are seeing the light from distant stars is
'red shifted.' What this means is that astronomers are not seeing the colour of
light they expect to see from these stars. Every element has its own set of
wavelengths when it emits or absorbs light. Scientists have developed a series
of laboratory standards which show exactly what group of wavelengths is emitted
or absorbed by each element. This is how scientists know what elements a star is
made up of. They look at the signature colours. However, as they look at stars
progressively more distant from the earth, the emitted light signatures
increasingly differ from those used as laboratory standards for these particular
elements. Instead the signature colours are shifted more towards the red end of
the spectrum. There are two possible explanations for this:
1. That the universe is expanding. This is the commonly accepted
explanation. The idea here is that, as the universe expands, the fabric of
space is getting stretched, including the light waves travelling in it from
distant objects. This means the wavelengths will appear longer, or more red,
than they were when
they were originally emitted.
2. That something is happening to the electrons/atoms themselves to
cause
them to emit more energetic, or bluer light now, so that when we look back
in time, the emitted light appears redder than our laboratory standards.
How would we be able to tell
which is the right explanation? If the expanding universe idea is correct, then
we should be able to see the sort of smooth and constant change that was
demonstrated in Table 1. If the second idea is correct, however, we should see
the effect of the atomic activity resisting change for awhile and then jerking
to a new pattern or state. So the redshift measurements are very important for
us to look at. Are they showing a smooth pattern or a 'lumpy' pattern showing
clusters of measurements with some kind of interval between them?
An astronomer in Arizona,
named William Tifft has done about twenty years' of measurements of redshifts.
He has documented that there is a clumping effect with the measurements. In
other words, they are quantised. Quantised redshift measurements present
evidence against the expanding universe explanation for the redshift. Tifft's
work was challenged by a number of people. Among them were Drs. Guthrie and
Napier, two astronomers. In both 1992 and 1994 they endeavoured to disprove
Tifft's work. These two men collected an entirely new set of data for
examination. Instead of being able to disprove Tifft, they found, to their
amazement, that they were ending up in agreement with Tifft and substantiating
his work.
So what does this redshift
quantisation tell us? It may indicate that some kind of energy 'jumping' is
occurring within atomic structures. If the universe has actually finished
expanding and is releasing that potential energy into space, then the
progressive increase of the energy available to each and every atom at the same
time will result in the sudden jumping of the redshift measurements at specific
intervals. This is because the pressure of the released energy would be building
up simultaneously throughout the universe and thus every atom in the cosmos
would also react simultaneously when the energy reached the threshold stage.
Thus we would expect to see emitted light undergoing the quantised jumps that
Tifft saw as we look back in time/distance into the universe.
At this point we see some of
the possible evidence for substantiation of Setterfield's theory that the
universe is no longer expanding but that energy is slowly being released into
the cosmos to cause the redshift changes the way we are seeing them. To
understand more, we have to look at the atom itself.
THE ATOM, LIGHT, AND MASS
The common idea of the atom,
taught in most school science classes, is that it is composed of a nucleus made
up of protons and neutrons and an outer series of electrons at various 'levels'
around the nucleus. One common model of the atom, called the Bohr model, shows
the electrons circling the nucleus like planets circle the sun. Although this is
a model that is easy to work with theoretically, the actual positions and
movements of the electrons is a matter of dispute. What we do know is that the
electrons are not all equally close to the nucleus, but exist at certain
definite levels, or distances out from the atom. The level sometimes called a
'shell' or even 'cloud' at which chemical interactions happen is the
outermost level or valence level. The implied idea in school up until university
is that all the other electrons stay nicely in place in their own little areas.
This is not what actually
happens, though. First of all, light is emitted from an atom when some kind of
incoming energy or particle pops an electron out of its customary place to one
farther away from the nucleus. In returning, or popping back, to its original
level, that electron then gives up the extra energy it received, and that energy
is emitted as light. So the first thing to understand is that the emission of
light depends on the amount of energy the electron received in the first place.
The next thing to understand
is not nearly as simple. It has to do with the answer to the question,
"What is mass?" The simplest explanation is that "no one knows
for sure." The first and most common idea is that mass is something in and
of itself, which is affected by energy. This idea considers mass to be, at some
point, a solid 'something.' The concept of most physicists who hold this view is
that each bit of mass is a kind of positively or negatively charged 'point'
inside a cloud of energy. It is known that there is a good deal of vibration in
all of the atomic structure, and that this vibration surrounds each atomic point
of charge. What is in the middle of this vibration has been assumed to be
something solid, something ever so tiny, but really there, which has a positive
or negative charge.
There are some physicists who
dispute this view, however. Since the mid 1990's there has been a group who has
put forward the theory that there is nothing solid about matter, or mass, at
all. This theory postulates that every electron, and every other subatomic
'particle', is really simply energy existing as positive or negative charges in
a very compact form. Mass, and therefore matter, would really then only be
specifically interacting charges of various configurations.
This can be a hard one to
swallow -- it's kind of hard to think of this computer and the table it is
sitting on, not to mention ourselves, as being conglomerations of pure energy!
But if you look at Einstein's equation, it might help it make a bit more sense.
THAT FAMOUS EQUATION
Whichever view of mass one
chooses to take, we need to take a closer look at Einstein's equation. Almost
everyone knows Einstein's famous equation, E = m c2. E is energy, m
is mass, and c is the speed of light. The most basic fact about this equation is
that it indicates that mass can become energy and energy can become mass.
Actually, we can see this matter/energy conversion in our own lives when we burn
wood and get heat and light energy along with ashes. Plants, on the other hand,
take energy from sunlight and use it to manufacture carbohydrates, which we then
eat and use for energy. So we can see both in theory and in life that mass and
energy can be exchanged.
As can be seen, there is another factor involved -- 'c', or light speed. If the
speed of light is changing, then, to keep Einstein's equation balanced, and
therefore true, either energy or mass must also be changing, or perhaps both of
them. How can one determine what might be going on here?
Through the years, various
'atomic constants' have been discovered and worked with mathematically and in
physics. An atomic constant tells us how the atom behaves in response to the
energy available to it. These constants are seen as determining the behaviour of
the atom in the same way as the 'natural laws' we recognise in science (such as
laws of gravity, laws of motion, etc.) govern the way other things behave. The
mathematical formulas dealing with these atomic constants are recognised as
being accurate. The 'constants' are called constant because it was originally
believed they wouldn't vary. However, for some of them, that has not proved to
be the case. There will be a little more about his later.
In determining effects
associated with the speed of light, Setterfield spent a great deal of time
working with the mathematical formulas associated with these constants. If light
speed was not constant, then was it energy or mass which was being conserved,
or, looking at it the other way, which one was changing? After working with all
manner of possibilities regarding the various atomic constants and the equations
involved, there ended up being only one possible answer: energy was being
conserved and mass was changing.
Yeah, right. So why aren't we
all getting fatter or skinnier or something? It's because we are not talking
about mass we can see and work with; we are talking about the mass of the atomic
parts. With atomic parts, mass refers to, in very simple language, how much
space, or volume, each atomic 'particle' takes up. And that depends on how much
it is vibrating. The more it vibrates, the more space, or volume, it occupies.
So whether mass is pure energy or whether there is some kind of a 'thing' inside
of all that energy, it doesn't matter. The more it vibrates, the more volume it
occupies, and thus the more mass it is considered to have atomically.
Thus, when Setterfield says
the mass is increasing, he does not mean anything is gaining weight. He is
saying that there is more 'jiggle' to each part of the atom's structure, thus
meaning every sub-atomic unit has a slightly greater volume, thereby taking up a
bit more space. This does not change the atom's structure or chemical
interactions. What it does change is the amount of energy in the electron
itself. So when an electron is 'popped' out of its level by incoming energy, and
then 'pops' back, the energy difference between where it is and where it is
returning to is higher after each quantum jump. It is this energy that is
responsible for the emission of light, so the light itself will be emitted at a
slightly higher energy, or shorter (bluer) wave-length, with each quantum jump.
SO WHAT ABOUT THIS CHANGING
SPEED OF LIGHT?
Let's go one step further now.
In the picture used with the balloon, the energy released by the relaxing rubber
was so minute compared to the surrounding air, that no changes were noticed.
However the universe is enormously large, and as its fabric relaxes, the energy
released into space is enormous. One of the things this energy does is flip back
and forth between matter and energy on an incredibly tiny scale. The very tiny
bits of matter that will flash into and out of existence are referred to as
virtual particles. They will be the key to being able to measure the energy
being released. The more virtual particles, the greater the energy in space.
So how to we count virtual
particles? We don't. But we can measure something they are doing. When light
travels, it gets absorbed by whatever it comes in contact with. In the case of a
wall, it is absorbed or reflected and that's that. With glass, most is absorbed
and then re-emitted the other side, with only a small amount getting lost or
reflected. Virtual particles also absorb the light that comes in contact with
them. And then they re-emit it, or pass it on. This takes a very short amount of
time, but nevertheless, it does take SOME time. Therefore the more virtual
particles there are, the slower it will appear light will travel, as it must be
absorbed and re-emitted by more particles in any given distance.
Following this theory through,
then, we should see a general drop in the speed of light measurements through
time as the amount of useable energy in the fabric of space increases. In other
words, as more energy is released into space, more virtual particles will be
popping into and out of existence, and this will cause light to take a slightly
longer time to travel from point A to point B. Because light speed is direct
result of the number of virtual particles in a given distance, we should see a
somewhat smooth function in the change in the speed of light. In other words,
like the first chart at the beginning of this article, the measurements would
show a smooth systematic change. What do we see historically?
Before the seventeenth
century, it was thought that the speed of light was infinite. However, by the
middle of the seventeenth century, the first light speed measurements had been
made by timing eclipses of Jupiter's moons. It became evident through the next
centuries that something strange seemed to be happening. Not only was the speed
of light NOT infinite, but, as more and more measurements of the speed of light
were made, there seemed to be a general trend showing it was slowing. By the
early twentieth century, this phenomenon was starting to be discussed and argued
about in the scientific literature.
We can now start tying a few
of the pieces above together. We know that the zero point energy is increasing,
as "Planck's Constant" is increasing. With this increase of energy, we
will have more of the virtual particles impeding the light as it travels, thus
slowing it down. In other words, the more energy we see affecting atomic
particles, the more we would expect to see light speed decreasing. Historic
measurements bear this out. The evidence of the quantised redshift also supports
this theory.
QUANTUM INTERVALS AND QUANTUM
JUMPS
There is more to consider in
this theory. The atom has two distinct 'times' in its existence. The first is
when it is jumping to a new energy level, propelled by the increasing energy
affecting it, and the second is all that time in between these quantum jumps,
which is called the quantum interval.
During the quantum interval,
the energy being released from the fabric of space continues to build, slowly
but surely. Various atomic 'constants' give indication of this with their
changing measurements. The interesting thing that has been found is that as some
'constants' go 'up', other related 'constants' go 'down.' Because of this, they
cancel out each other's effect on the atom itself, so the atom stays the same
during the quantum interval, even though some of the constants show continual,
small, gradual change.
But, eventually, when the
energy pressure has built up enough throughout the entire universe, every atom
in it changes simultaneously with a little jerk. These 'jerks' are not only
incredibly small, but although they were happening rapidly at first, have been
very rare in the last four thousand years. The energy being released into the
universe is now being released very slowly as the pressure from the initial
stretching has been progressively dissipated. But when these 'jerks' happen, and
the atom finally responds to the build-up of energy, every single atomic
'particle' starts jiggling, or vibrating, a little more, taking up a little more
volume for itself. This is the gain in mass mentioned earlier.
This gain in mass is a result
of the same release of energy that is slowing down light speed. That is because
the more energy is released into 'empty space', or the vacuum, the more virtual
particles will be popping into and out of existence, as a result of that energy.
And the more virtual particles, the more of them will be in the way of a beam of
light, and the more often the beam of light will be absorbed and re-emitted by
them. Thus it will take light more time to get from one point to another.
Einstein realised that mass
and energy and light speed were all related. Thus we have the equation E=mc2.
Setterfield is trying to show us where and when this is true in the universe
itself. There are a number of men who are studying the speed of light right now,
and some of them have been writing articles and making the news. Studies which
show man himself can slow down or speed up the speed of light are interesting,
but they are not directly relevant to the idea that the speed of light has not
stayed constant in the universe through time. Other studies and papers by men
such as Albrecht, Magueijo, Barrow, and Troitskii, who are studying the idea of
a changing speed of light in the universe through time, are mostly dealing with
the subject on a purely theoretical basis. By contrast, Setterfield is primarily
dealing with the data that has been collected and with the phenomena we have
been able to note scientifically. As such, whether his work ends up being right
or wrong, it deserves much closer attention than the mainstream scientific world
has been willing to give it up to this point.
SOME QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
1. Why hasn't the mainstream
scientific world paid attention to Mr. Setterfield?
Primarily for two reasons: Mr. Setterfield's analysis is a strong
indicator that the entire universe is probably very young. This does not sit
well with evolutionists, who require a very long time for their ideas to work.
Secondly, Mr. Setterfield was forced to leave university training to take care
of sick family members years ago and had to continue his studies on his own, and
thus never got a degree. He has, however, continually subjected his work to the
scrutiny of others who are highly qualified in the fields of math, statistics,
and physics to make sure he is not mishandling data or miscalculating in his
math.
2. Why hasn't Mr. Setterfield
been published in peer-reviewed journals if his work is correct?
Setterfield's recent technical paper has been submitted to three
different journals in the past two years. It was refused by the two physics
journals because a) it was declared not of sufficient importance or substantive
enough; b) it would not be agreed to by a majority of scientists in the field,
and c) one reviewer did not like the fact that one of his references (out of
over 150 references) was a university text and not a peer-reviewed or other
professional journal. The astronomy journal refused it saying it looked very
interesting but belonged in a physics journal. The paper is now being prepared
for the web. None of the refusals Mr. Setterfield received criticised his
physics or his math. They simply did not like the clear conclusions that had to
be drawn from them.
3. Wouldn't a change in the
speed of light upset biological processes?
No. This is a common misconception. Biological processes are basically
chemical processes. Speed of light changes, as noted above, do not change the
position of the valence electrons of each atom. It is these outer electrons
which govern chemical reactions. Would the increased amount of charge (the
greater volume taken up by each charge) not change the rate of these reactions?
There are two things to consider here. First of all, the increased charges of
the electrons would repel each other more forcefully, thus providing a slowing
effect, which would tend to counterbalance the possibly more rapid reaction rate
in the present. In the past, conversely, the atomic particles would have had a
lower charge resulting in decreased energy for the atom. This would have slowed
reaction rates in counterbalance to the decrease in repulsive force between
electrons. In addition, if one were to consider simply one individual chemical
reaction, there might still be a significant change in biological processes.
However biological processes are not individual reactions, they are chains, or
cascades of reactions. Each cascade is governed by the slowest part of the
reaction. Thus there is a natural brake applied which protects life itself from
the consequences of too fast a series of reactions.
4. What about radioactive
decay? Wouldn't a faster light speed cause a much faster rate of decay in the
past, releasing more heat, and burning up the planet, or at least all of life?
First of all yes, a faster light speed is indicative of a much faster
rate of radio decay. This is because the equivalent of 'c', the speed of light,
is in the numerator of every reduced equation for every decay rate. Thus, the
faster the speed of light, the higher the rate of decay. The first effect we
see, then, is that we need to be very careful about the ages we assign to items
which are analysed this way.
In addition, most radioactive elements were deep inside the earth's
interior initially, so that life on the surface was safe. Because all the
radioactive atomic elements were decaying initially, those with short half
lives, which have since finished decaying would have contributed to a very rapid
build up of heat in the interior. However, it was not be until the heat caused
enough of a build-up to break through the crust of the earth in some kind of
explosive activity that the surface of the earth would have been affected. (What
is interesting is that throughout the ancient cultures of man, we have stories
and legends about just such activity happening.) We do not see this heating
effect today on the surface or underneath in part because the speed of light has
slowed significantly and also because the original short half-lived elements
have finished decaying.
It should also be noted that the amount of heat radiation in a given
volume from any given reaction would also be lower. This may be the end of the
paper, but listen up here this one is a bit complicated.
1. Space transmits electromagnetic waves, such as light. This means
space itself must have both electric and magnetic properties. The electric
property of space is referred to as 'permittivity' and the magnetic property is
referred to as 'permeability.' These properties are governed by the number of
virtual particles popping in and out of existence in a given volume. When there
are fewer virtual particles per given volume, both the permittivity and the
permeability of space are lower, which means that there is less resistance to
the electric and magnetic elements of the photon ('packet' of light). Without
this resistance, light travels more quickly.
2. In combination with the first point, when the speed of light was
faster, a photon of light would travel farther in one second than it would
travel now. That means that the same amount of light, or any radiation, would
take up a greater volume at any one time. And THAT means that in any given, or
defined, volume, the actual density of radiation from any given reaction would
be less before than now.
3. Although faster radioactive decay rates mean that more radioactive
atoms are decaying in a given time, the heat problem is offset by two factors:
First that the amount of heat radiation in a given volume is lower, as explained
in the previous two points. Secondly, as explained earlier in this paper, as we
go back in time we are also going back to before so much energy was available to
the atom. Before each quantum jump, the atom had lower energy than after. So the
net effect here is that the earlier in time, the lower the energy of the atom,
even though the light speed and therefore the actual rate of decay was faster.
This lower energy in the atom thus somewhat reduced the amount of heat released
by any given decay process.
Thus, the expected 'frying' effect of a higher radiodecay rate which
would be part of a time of higher light speed was counteracted by several
factors:
First, the initial depth in the earth of radioactive materials.
Second, the increased volume taken up by any given photon.
Third, the lower energy in the atom in the past.
* * * * * * * * * * *
[Note from the authors: In an
effort to provide the student with easily visualisable concepts, there has been
a necessary simplification of some technical points. However we do have
confidence that the basic concepts, as presented here, are correct.]
March 1, 2001