LOS ALTOS HILLS, Calif., May 28, 2008 (AScribe Newswire) — Astro-cosmologist Jerome Drexler explains the precise nature of dark matter of the universe, why the expansion of the universe is accelerating, how cosmic inflation started and stopped, why the Big Bang was not a fireball, and exactly where ultra-high-energy cosmic rays get their enormous energy. No one else has plausibly explained these cosmic phenomena.
On top of that, Drexler links all five of these phenomena into a single unified theory he calls postmodern cosmology. His cosmology relies on astronomical data, the laws of physics, the principles of logic and new physics-based concepts such as “dark matter relationism”, a “relativistic Big Bang,” and “soft X-ray synchrotron emission from dark matter particles.” Neither superstring theory nor multiple universes are necessary in this postmodern cosmology.
He has clearly and logically disclosed his postmodern cosmology in a trilogy of books published in December 2003, May 2006, and March 2008, which are marketed by barnes&noble.com, amazon.com, universal-publishers.com and many other book sellers.
Drexler’s books provide substantial evidence that his postmodern cosmology plausibly solves/explains twenty previously unsolved cosmic enigmas, mysteries, anomalies, or conundrums. In order for him to solve/explain twenty such cosmic mysteries in a convincing manner, his postmodern cosmology must be substantially valid — or else he must be impossibly lucky.
Meanwhile, mainstream cosmologists have not provided plausible solutions/explanations for any of these twenty cosmic mysteries. Yet, they continue to publish obsolescent cosmology books to be used for teaching our future cosmologists, astrophysicists, and astronomers. Meantime, NASA, the National Science Foundation (NSF), and the U.S. Department of Energy (U.S. DOE) are paying for research, totaling billions of dollars, seeking solutions to cosmic mysteries already solved, explained, or clarified by Drexler in his published trilogy of cosmology books or scientific papers.
Why aren’t Drexler’s published books and scientific papers referenced in any books or scientific papers of the cosmologists? When cosmologists have requested research funds from the above U.S. agencies have they disclosed relevant data and conclusions from Drexler’s published books and papers? Why aren’t the mainstream cosmologists publishing scientific papers attempting to disprove Drexler’s postmodern cosmology so that NASA, the NSF, and the U.S. DOE could justify continuing funding for mainstream cosmology research? Can these U.S. government agencies get the cosmologists back on track or are investigative reporters required?
Drexler’s 292-page, March 2008, dark matter based paperback, “Discovering Postmodern Cosmology,” was written to provide solutions to the five top priority cosmic-phenomena enigmas and extensive evidence that mainstream cosmology is seriously flawed and should be overhauled, and to explain how that might be accomplished.
Drexler’s May 22, 2006 book, “Comprehending and Decoding the Cosmos,” which plausibly solves at least 15 cosmic enigmas, is cataloged and available in over 40 astronomy and physics libraries around the world. They include libraries at Harvard, Stanford, Yale, UC Berkeley, UC Santa Cruz, Cornell, Harvard-Smithsonian, Vassar, and the universities of Hawaii, Toronto, Illinois, Edinburgh, Hamburg, Goettingen, Groningen, Copenhagen, Chile, Bologna, Helsinki, Lisbon, Guadalajara, Kyoto, and the Max-Planck- Institut for Astrophysik.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR OF THE THREE BOOKS: Jerome Drexler is a former member of the technical staff and group supervisor at Bell Laboratories, former research professor in physics at New Jersey Institute of Technology, and founder and former Chairman and chief scientist of LaserCard Corp.(Nasdaq: LCRD). He has been awarded 76 U.S. patents, honorary Doctor of Science degrees from NJIT and Upsala College, a degree of Honorary Fellow of the Technion, an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship at Stanford University, a three-year Bell Labs graduate study fellowship, the 1990 “Inventor of the Year Award” for Silicon Valley and recognition as the inventor in 1978 of the now widely-used digital optical disk “Laser Optical Storage System.” He is a member of the Board of Overseers of New Jersey Institute of Technology and an Honorary Life Member of the Technion Board of Governors.

Good Book on Dark Matter