Gravity as a Wave Phenomenon using W-Waves

Jerry W. Decker ( (no email) )
Sat, 11 Dec 1999 20:06:39 -0600

Hi Folks!

You might be interested in Dr. Orvin E. Wagners page on 'W'
waves at;

www.chatlink.com/~oedphd

Wagner Research Laboratory has been doing research on
W-waves since 1988. W-waves are slow moving longitudinal
waves that we first found in plants. For
more information on that subject visit the Plant Research
Page. It became apparent early that these waves are
fundamental to plant organization.

They also seem to have something to do with the formation
and organization of the solar system and universe. The work
at Wagner Research Laboratory (WRL) has demonstrated that
the wave theory solves many problems of the solar system and
universe that other theories do not touch.
-------------------
with a serious heads up for his new article on 'Gravity as
Wave Phenomenon' at;

http://www.chatlink.com/~oedphd/cosmology/gravity.html

Plant physiologists have been working with plants near 150
years without coming up with a solution to how a plant
interacts with gravity. Many years ago this author concluded
that there must be something fundamental in a plant's
interaction with gravity.

For 20 years or so attempts were made to find a satisfactory
answer to the problem. In January 1988 strong evidence was
found that plants are operated by
waves (called W-waves because they were first found in wood)
7.

W-waves were not only found in plants but everywhere I
checked outside of plants including the vacuum9. These waves
are generally low velocity longitudinal waves except in
empty space. During the last several years I associated
these waves with plant structure, sap flow, a plant's
interaction with light, a plant's interaction with gravity
and other plant processes (see all the Wagner references).

The velocities and/or frequencies of the waves are different
depending on what angle they are traveling with respect to
the gravitational field. This results in major differences
in plant structure in different directions with respect to
the gravitational field. One might characterize at least
part of the effect as due to a larger and larger
gravitational red shift, or decrease in W-wave frequencies,
as the plant part's angle decreases with respect to the
gravitational field 9,10.

By using small accelerometers in trees I found that plants
reduce gravity to facilitate sap flow11. Just as was
hypothesized it was concluded that a plants interaction with
gravity is indeed a fundamental process.

Since the waves interacted with both gravity and charge
within the plant it appears possible that W-waves and
related fields unify the forces of nature10.
Perhaps the humble plant is not so humble after all. The
finding that plants interact with gravity in a fundamental
way suggested to this author that gravity is not a curvature
of space phenomenon but a wave phenomenon.

What kind of wave phenomenon could produce forces canceling
gravity to move sap up trees? Plant waves in most cases
appear to come in the form of standing waves. For an
explanation of standing waves see elementary physics texts
and the
glossary.

In plants the standing W-waves displace charge since charge
is free to move and charge tends to clump at intervals along
a plant stem under the influence of W-wave standing waves.

In the laboratory one can produce moving and stationary
standing waves in ordinary florescent tubes12. These F-tube
effects look like they might also be due to W-waves. With
the proper sound wave sources I am able to continuously move
a meter or so of dust along a special sound tube in either
direction or hold it stationary (unpublished results).

These observations suggested that a plant might facilitate
sap flow by utilizing moving standing waves just as one can
move dust along a tube with sound waves.
Using tiny accelerometers one can measure gravity reductions
of up to 22% in small holes in the sap conducting tissue of
trees11 indicating that the hypothesized forces are
present.. These reductions are likely just a small part of
what one could see if one could be within a cell making
observations within live plant material.

The idea of moving standing waves exerting a forces on
matter is intriguing. Since there are major drawbacks to the
curvature of space model of gravity maybe gravity is just a
superposition of moving standing waves produced by presently
undefined ultimate structures of matter. It appears that
electrons are composed of standing waves with a centralized
source13. According to a wave equation and a derived
equation the sun seems to be a source of standing waves that
originally determined the initial locations of the planets
and now stabilizes the solar system13,14

Standing waves may just be a natural consequence of
traveling W-waves in the dark matter and/or vacuum medium.
Moving standing waves may not be that much of a step, in
nature, away from ordinary standing waves.

Perhaps every ultimate particle of ordinary matter in the
universe produces a spherical standing wave which moves
inward toward the particle creating an attractive force on
all other matter in the field of the moving standing waves.
Presently the ultimate structure is not defined.

The waves produced have such short wavelengths that they
penetrate all ordinary
matter.

--      Jerry Wayne Decker  -  jdecker@keelynet.com             http://www.keelynet.com             from an Art to a Science   Voice : (214)324-8741 -  FAX : (214)324-3501             KeelyNet - PO BOX 870716        Mesquite - Republic of Texas - 75187

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