How Dark Matter Created Dark Energy and the Sun

Author:

Jerome Drexler

Publisher:

Universal Publishers

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Publisher

Universal Publishers

Publication Year 2003
ISBN-13

9781581125511

ISBN-10 1581125518
Binding

Paperback

Number of Pages 160 Pages
Language (English)
Weight (grms) 209
Through use of a lecture-slide format, this book presents an astrophysics detective story that chronicles Jerome Drexler's literature search for astronomical clues and evidence to unveil the nature of dark matter. There are a number of mysteries in astrophysics and cosmology that have remained unsolved for decades. What is dark matter? How exactly are stars created? In 1998, it was determined from supernova studies that the expansion of the Universe was accelerating, thereby creating the mystery of dark energy. Astrophysicists have developed mutually exclusive, single-phenomenon theories for each of these three phenomena, but not a unified theory for all three of them. The author's original goal was to identify dark matter, a decades-old mystery. In the process, he developed a new theory for dark matter and illuminated the nature of dark energy and the process of Sun formation. Since dark matter may have been instrumental in the creation of galaxies and stars, the author decided to test his new dark matter theory on the formation of the Sun. The results were very encouraging. He next sought a possible link between dark matter and the accelerating expansion of the Universe, which is attributed to the mysterious dark energy. Using his dark matter theory and the laws of physics, the author explained the accelerating expansion of the Universe in a plausible manner. This book chronicles the author's search for a unified astrophysical theory and how it finally evolved

Jerome Drexler

Jerome Drexler began his career as a Member of the Technical Staff of Bell Laboratories in R&D on microwave power sources utilizing high energy electron streams. He has been granted 76 U.S. patents involving megawatt microwave electronics, laser recording, and optical data storage. He also has founded two successful U.S. electronics companies, received Honorary Doctor of Science degrees from New Jersey Institute of Technology and Upsala College, and received an Honorary Fellowship from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology. For his invention of the computer-based optical memory card, he received the Inventor of the Year Award in 1990 for California s Silicon Valley.
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