I read a book in 2008 titled Lost Star. The book suggested that - TopicsExpress



          

I read a book in 2008 titled Lost Star. The book suggested that our sun is in a co-orbit with Sirius. Lost Star (2006), by Walter Cruttenden, sheds an interesting light on the precession issue. Walter Cruttendens central claim in Lost Star is that Sol is in a co-orbital relationship with Sirius, and that the phenomenon of precession is a result of this relationship. loststarbook/ Cruttendens claim is supported by the fact that, in antiquity, Sirius was referred to as a red star (explained by the red-shift phenomenon, if Sirius was indeed traveling away from us) . . . but now - after the passing of the Dark Age - Sirius is seen as blue (indicating that Sirius is traveling toward us). The idea of a co-orbital relationship between Sol and Sirius gives meaning to the ancient idea of the Great Year. One of the interesting claims of the book is that the radiant energy from Sirius increases both physical and psychological health of human beings (and presumably other living things). A recurring Dark Age, says Cruttenden, occurs at the point in the Great Year when Sirius is farthest from us, and a recurring Golden Age occurs when Sirius is closest to us. Cruttenden also claims that it is not our earth that wobbles against the backdrop of the solar system but the solar system that wobbles against the backdrop of the night sky. He suggests, in short, that Sirius has perturbed our entire solar system. Of course, Sir Isaac Newton had other ideas. Cruttenden writes: Not knowing the solar system could move, Newton explained the suns changing position by assuming lunisolar forces wobbled the earth; the lunisolar theory. But Newtons equations did not work. They were supposedly fixed many times over the years by physicists who added inputs for everything from the inner and outer planets to asteroids and changes in the earths atmosphere - all in an effort to make the equations output match the changing precession observable. With all the patches and repairs, the equation now has almost 1400 terms! In comparison, a moving solar system model, based on Keplers laws and the orbit parameters put forth by Sri Yukteswar in 1894, has a fraction of the terms and has proven to be 41x more accurate in predicting the changing rate of precession (seen as the suns annual motion across the stellar background) over the last 100 years. Animated .gif showing the proposed co-orbital relationship of Sol and Sirius: .gif: binaryresearchinstitute.org/bri/images/research/swf/web_intro_binary.swf page: binaryresearchinstitute.org/bri/research/introduction/theory.shtml Short article by Walter Cruttenden: Ancient Cosmology: A Map of the Future? noetic.org/noetic/issue-eight-march/ancient-cosmology-a-map-of-the-future/?comments_form%3Fc=1854 Millennium Twain on the Sirius-Sol co-orbit: tech.dir.groups.yahoo/group/KundaliniAerospace/message/423
Posted on: Tue, 13 May 2014 04:49:46 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015