The Speed of Light and the Hubble Parameter: The Mass-Boom Effect
Antonio Alfonso-Faus

TL;DR
This paper proposes a cosmological model where the speed of light decreases over time, leading to a universe without dark matter or dark energy, and explains cosmic expansion, redshift, and inflation through the Mass-Boom effect.
Contribution
It introduces the Mass-Boom model, linking decreasing light speed to increasing mass, and derives cosmological parameters without dark matter or dark energy.
Findings
Speed of light c decreases linearly with time.
The model predicts a universe with zero cosmological constant.
Redshift law and photon acceleration align with observations.
Abstract
We prove here that Newtons universal gravitation and momentum conservation laws together reproduce Weinbergs relation. It is shown that the Hubble parameter H must be built in this relation, or equivalently the age of the Universe t. Using a wave-to-particle interaction technique we then prove that the speed of light c decreases with cosmological time, and that c is proportional to the Hubble parameter H. We see the expansion of the Universe as a local effect due to the LAB value of the speed of light co taken as constant. We present a generalized red shift law and find a predicted acceleration for photons that agrees well with the result from Pioneer 10/11 anomalous acceleration. We finally present a cosmological model coherent with the above results that we call the Mass-Boom. It has a linear increase of mass m with time as a result of the speed of light c linear decrease with time,…
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