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Is Dark Matter the Higher Dimensional Home Where We Came From, and Will Return To? Greg Giles

Tuesday, July 29, 2014 12:18
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When we are traveling along in our automobiles and search for our favorite station on the radio, we are tuning to a certain frequency through which our favorite station is being broadcast. There are many other radio frequencies that exist, or are currently broadcasting, though we are only tuning in to one at a time. This analogy may be the microcosm to the macrocosm, which is that it is possible, perhaps even likely, that as humans here on Earth we are only perceiving a small portion of the larger reality, just as our car radio tuners only tune to one radio station at a time.

Many scientists and researchers believe that as humans we can only perceive a mere 5% or so of the reality that actually surrounds us, the other 95% of matter insusceptible by our human senses. This mysterious, unseen, unfelt and unheard reality is known as dark matter.

Is this area of in-perceivable matter that surrounds us the home where we originally come from, and is this where we will eventually return to after our current lifetime comes to an end? If this is indeed the case, then upon death we do not have very far to travel for our joyful reunion. Though we sometimes feel we are so very far from home, our home may be as close to us now as the clothes we are wearing on our backs.  

Greg Giles



Wikipedia describes dark matter as:

Dark matter is a type of matter in astronomy and cosmology hypothesized to account for effects that appear to be the result of invisible mass. Dark matter cannot be seen directly with telescopes; evidently it neither emits nor absorbs light or other electromagnetic radiation at any significant level. It is otherwise hypothesized to simply be matter that is not reactant to light.[1] Instead, the existence and properties of dark matter are inferred from its gravitational effects on visible matter, radiation, and the large-scale structure of the universe. According to the Planck mission team, and based on the standard model of cosmology, the total mass–energy of the known universe contains 4.9% ordinary matter, 26.8% dark matter and 68.3% dark energy.[2][3] Thus, dark matter is estimated to constitute 84.5% of the total matter in the universe, while dark energy plus dark matter constitute 95.1% of the total content of the universe.[4][5]

Astrophysicists hypothesized dark matter because of discrepancies between the mass of large astronomical objects determined from their gravitational effects and the mass calculated from the “luminous matter” they contain: stars, gas, and dust. It was first postulated by Jan Oort in 1932 to account for the orbital velocities of stars in the Milky Way and by Fritz Zwicky in 1933 to account for evidence of “missing mass” in the orbital velocities of galaxies in clusters. Subsequently, many other observations have indicated the presence of dark matter in the universe, including the rotational speeds of galaxies by Vera Rubin[6] in the 1960s–1970s, gravitational lensing of background objects by galaxy clusters such as the Bullet Cluster, the temperature distribution of hot gas in galaxies and clusters of galaxies, and more recently the pattern of anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background. According to consensus among cosmologists, dark matter is composed primarily of a not yet characterized type of subatomic particle.[7][8] The search for this particle, by a variety of means, is one of the major efforts in particle physics today.[9]

Although the existence of dark matter is generally accepted by the mainstream scientific community, some alternative theories of gravity have been proposed, such as MOND and TeVeS, which try to account for the anomalous observations without requiring additional matter.



Source: http://www.ascensionearth2012.org/2014/07/is-dark-matter-higher-dimensional-home.html

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