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Extended Definitions

Gravitational Constant, "g"

Conventional theories would define the gravitational constant as determining the amount of gravity produced between two masses a given distance apart. The greater the gravitational constant, the greater the gravitational pull.

Some theories of the universe, starting with a theory proposed by Dirac, have speculated that the gravitational constant would decrease (change) proportional to the size and age of the universe. Present day experiments seem to put a very small limit on the amount of change which could occur in the gravitational constant before we could measure the result.

The C-R theory proposes that, instead of the gravitational constant, it is the amount of de-activation of real time which affects the gravitational pull. Once the full amount of real time has been inactivated for some matter, i.e., absolute zero on the time scale, no further gravitational influence can be felt by that matter. The matter itself still produces it's contribution to the total gravitational field.

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