There is no center of the universe claims NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab physicists

Published on 8 August 2025 at 08:54

08/08/2025

 

Physicists at NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab have made a pretty significant public statement regarding the nature of the universe, specifically that there is no centre of the universe, because the boundaries of the observable keep expanding is their conclusion.

 

No, There is No ‘Center’ of the Universe – A Physicist Explains

 

Our conclusion is that the 'observable' universe is expanding towards much greater mass in every direction, driven and proven by Newton's universal gravity, resulting in the particles from the Big Bang supernova-like event accelerating with decreasing radius between the non-centre of the Big Bang outward towards much greater mass in every direction.

 

Newton's law of universal gravitation - Wikipedia

 

Physicists in New Zealand have since observed and measured evidence supporting our claims, when they found that the acceleration of the furthest galaxies is "clumpy" or "not constant", as otherwise required by the false and impossible dark energy theory, which separately violates the conservation of energy in thermodynamics (by creating a growing energy source, dark energy, out of thin air, to justify expansion of space).

 

A new conference on dark energy further debunks the need for this well-intended, but impossible placeholder calculation, and instead makes the case for a gravity-driven 'big shred' event based on much more mass outside of the observable universe. / African Mutterland | Uprights News

 

We contend that the New Zealand results and the acceleration of the furthest galaxies is proof of much greater clumpy mass outside of the observable universe than within the same, resulting in the contents blown off the Big Bang approaching the unobservable universe due to the Big Bang, then accelerating towards the edge of the universe due to much greater mass, analogous to setting off an explosion underwater in the sea, which pushes the contents of the explosive outwards until it meets the surrounding ocean, which eventually absorbs everything within the explosion.