TITLE:
Detection and Determination of the Variation of the Speed of Time
AUTHORS:
Robert M. L. Baker, Bonnie Sue Baker, Fangyu Li
KEYWORDS:
Early Universe, High-Frequency Gravitational Waves, High-Frequency Relic Gravitational Waves, Primordial Gravitational Waves, Cosmology, Speed of Time, Dark Matter, Dark Energy, Galactic Velocity Curves
JOURNAL NAME:
Journal of Modern Physics,
Vol.12 No.6,
May
12,
2021
ABSTRACT: Steadily increasing time is involved in most scientific analyses. Like other dimensions in spacetime we suggest that there can be a variation rate of time’s progress or speed of time in the time dimension. We study speed-of-time variation observational data in three processes: muon decay, galaxy rotation (related to dark matter) and the separation speed of celestial objects as our Universe progresses (related to dark energy). Each of these processes will have an “observed value” of their time of completion Po from an observation of the process at time t1 and an “expected value” Pe of that time at time t2. Their difference is attributed to the variation of the speed of time. We provide a possible explanation for the anomalous separation of the observed and the expected galactic velocity curves. Our conclusion is that it is unnecessary to introduce dark matter or dark energy.