Changing acceleration rate of the universe fractal paper
On New Year's Eve, I worked away at finishing a paper I'd started a month or two earlier. I wanted it to be a paper in a day it ended up being a month or two because I left it and worked on my book. But I knew I had to finish it before the end of the year, and when I set my mind to something, it usually gets done if I stick with it.
Anyway, I published a paper in my usual(s). Changing Acceleration Rate (Cosmological Constant) Endogenous to Empirical Fractal Cosmology Model
In it, I linked the recent observations—be they Sigma 4—that the acceleration rate is decreasing with time (it is less now than in the past)—to my fractal model, which I published in the International Journal of Quantum Foundations and which demonstrates this property.
The following diagram is pulled empirically from a model of a growing fractal. It directly demonstrates how the acceleration rate changes with time and distance. This is precisely what the universe is doing, along with Hubble expansion and accelerated expansion. Not only that, but the model fits the distribution of galaxies and their demographics. This model directly links to a geometry that also demonstrates 'quantum mechanics'. Fractal geometry, in cosmology and light, is a contender for explaining these phenomena.
I used to have so much enthusiasm for this kind of thing, but I'm losing it. Maybe the reason for my lack of enthusiasm or apathy is written into the code of the fractal. That is, as with the 80/20 principle, it's hard to do the last part. In this case, I feel a little humiliated, a little foolish, and a little stupid. No call for empathy here, just a bit of the blues.
I really just don't think it's possible to get anything like this taken seriously today. And if they did take it seriously, what am I gonna do with it?
I'd like to say thanks to my maths colleague who sits next to me in my office. When I told her what I had because I do get quite excited, she said, " Do it, just write it up and do it. Yeah, just do it.
Happy New Year, everyone, and hope it's a safe one.
Blair

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