Hydro-Gravitational-Dynamics of Planets and Dark Energy
Carl H. Gibson (UCSD) Rudolph E. Schild (Harvard)

TL;DR
This paper introduces hydro-gravitational-dynamics (HGD), a fluid mechanical approach that predicts early universe structure formation, challenges standard cosmological models, and offers alternative explanations for dark energy and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents a novel fluid mechanical framework for cosmology that explains structure formation and dark energy phenomena without relying on standard LCDM assumptions.
Findings
Plasma fragmentation leads to early universe structures.
Dark matter diffuses and fragments at large scales.
Supernova Ia dimming may be caused by planetary nebulae, affecting dark energy estimates.
Abstract
Self-gravitational fluid mechanical methods termed hydro-gravitational-dynamics (HGD) predict plasma fragmentation 0.03 Myr after the turbulent big bang to form protosuperclustervoids, turbulent protosuperclusters, and protogalaxies at the 0.3 Myr transition from plasma to gas. Linear protogalaxyclusters fragment at 0.003 Mpc viscous-inertial scales along turbulent vortex lines or in spirals, as observed. The plasma protogalaxies fragment on transition into white-hot planet-mass gas clouds (PFPs) in million-solar-mass clumps (PGCs) that become globular-star-clusters (GCs) from tidal forces or dark matter (PGCs) by freezing and diffusion into 0.3 Mpc halos with 97% of the galaxy mass. The weakly collisional non-baryonic dark matter diffuses to > Mpc scales and frag-ments to form galaxy cluster halos. Stars and larger planets form by binary mergers of the trillion PFPs per PGC on 0.03 Mpc…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Geophysics and Gravity Measurements · Astro and Planetary Science
