I have noticed that the most fundamental formulae of physics shows that The Theory Of Stationary Space, my version of string theory as described on the cosmology blog, must be correct.
A brief review of this theory is that matter in the universe consists not of particles, as we perceive them, but as very long strings of very slight cross-section stretching across the universe, and aligned mostly in one direction in space after having been thrown outward in the Big Bang which began the universe as we know it.
These strings, and the bundles of strings that we perceive as objects, exist in at least four dimensions of space. We experience one of these dimensions as time, the dimension along which the strings are mostly aligned, which is why we see matter as being composed of particles, rather than strings. When two bundles of strings are not in perfect dimensional alignment, we perceive it as relative motion between two objects.
What we perceive as the speed of light is actually the rate of progression of our consciousness along the bundle of strings composing our brains and bodies. This explains why we can measure the speed of light with great precision, but can find no apparent physical reason of why it is what it is.
Today, let's have a look at more such evidence of the truth of this theory contained in simple formulae of basic physics.
The formulae that are familiar to all beginning physics students are D = VT, which is distance = velocity multiplied by time. F = MA, force = mass multiplied by acceleration. KE = 1/2 MV squared, kinetic energy = one-half mass multiplied by the velocity squared.
Einstein's well-known E = MC squared, means that energy = mass times the speed of light squared. Ohm's Law of I = E/R, electric current = voltage divided by resistance. The Planck Postulate that E = hv, the energy in a quantum of electromagnetic radiation where h is Planck's Constant and v is the frequency of the radiation.
Now, do you notice a pattern here in these most basic of physics formulae? All are three-part formulae, with the form of A = BC. All describe how some type of resistance can be overcome, or something that requires work can be accomplished, by a product of two variables. It is my conclusion that this must tell us something about the underlying nature of the universe. These are the most basic formulae of physics, the more complex formulae can be described as compound formulae.
Remember that, according to my cosmological theory, it is bent strings and bundles of strings that we perceive as objects having motion and momentum. When this bending of strings takes place, there are only two possible variables: the number of strings that are bent and the angle, or amount, that the strings are bent. This is why these most fundamental pf physics formulae all take the form A = BC. B is the number of strings that are bent by some force, C is the amount that they are bent and A is the result of the bending.
This simple three-part formula takes different forms as we apply it to different scales. When we are looking at a large scale, with matter in motion, the formula appears to us as the D = VT of distance covered, the F = MA for force exerted by a moving object or, the KE = 1/2 MV squared for ther kinetic energy of a potentially falling object.
When we move downward in scale to the movement of electrons, the formula takes the form of Ohm's Law for electric current in amperes, I = E/R. The current is equal to the voltage pressure in volts divided by the resistance in ohms. This law is familiar to any electric shop class.
When we move on to a still smaller scale, within atomic nuclei, the formula appears as Einstein's E = MC squared. This means that the energy contained in a given amount of nuclear matter is equal to the mass multiplied by the speed of light squared. When we deal with the production of electromagnetic waves by the bending of strings, the formula appears as Planck's E = hv.
The point that I am making here is that it is the same three-part formula that appears to us in different forms, according to the scale to which it is applied. But it is all the same formula involving the simple bending of the strings of which matter is composed.
At the most fundamental levels of reality, inside the atomic nuclei and in the production of electromagnetic waves, one of the variables is replaced by a constant. This is because, in the Planck formula, we are down to a single quanta of energy, or the bending of only one string. In Einstein's E = MC squared, there is a constant only because there is only one angle at which the strings comprising the nucleus can be bent, a right angle which we perceive as being the speed of light. So that the only variable in E = MC squared is the mass, and the only variable with Planck is the frequency. Planck's Constant is related to Planck's Length, which is the size of one of the infinitesimal alternately-charged particles of space, as I described in my theory.
As it turns out, we have a real bonus here today. If Einstein's E = MC squared is just one manifestation of this universal formula involving the bending of strings of matter, and the M in the formula represents mass, then the C squared must represent the bending of the strings comprising the atomic nucleus, since these are the only two possible variables here. This can only mean that when the binding energy in the nucleus is removed by splitting, the like-charged protons, which are as close as can be to one another, will fly off in oposite directions by mutual repulsion at what we perceive as the speed of light.
By the way, there are two types of nuclear reaction, fission and fusion. Both release binding energy that is no longer needed following the reaction. Fission, the splitting of a large nucleus such as by the firing into it of a high-speed neutron "bullet", actually releases the two smaller resulting nuclei. Fission binds smaller atoms, such as hydrogen, into larger nuclei by tremendous pressure. This releases the energy which was holding back the particles from speeding away at the speed of light by mutual repulsion, instead of the particles themselves.
Remember that since our consciousness is moving along the bundles of strings comprising our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light a string, or bundle of strings, bent at a right angle relative to the usual alignment of strings across the universe, will be perceived by us as moving at the speed of light. We experience this as the maximum possible speed simply because a right angle bend is the maximum possible bend.
These right-angle strings suddenly bent by the dissolution of the nucleus, then collide with and impart their energy to other matter. This is what gives us the tremendous nuclear energy, and it is how the speed of light relates to matter. It also shows, once again, that my model of cosmology must be correct.
But why is the speed of light squared in E = MC squared? This must mean that there must somehow be two speeds of light involved in a nuclear reaction. If the reaction causes particles to fly off by mutual repulsion initially at the speed of light, that only gives us one speed of light. So, why is it squared?
Remember my explanation in the theory of the electromagnetic energy that we perceive as travelling at the speed of light. This radiation is actually only stationary ripples in space, we perceive it as electromagnetic because it disturbs the equilibrium of the space, which consists of infinitesimal alternating negative and positive charges. It is our consciousness that is moving past the ripples at the speed of light, causing it to seem to us that it is moving at the speed of light.
But now, the nuclear reaction actually does release matter at what we perceive as the speed of light, which is a right angle bend by the mutual repulsion of like-charged protons. So, unlike with the stationary ripples of electromagnetic radiation, there actually is two speeds of light. One is the particles, or the released energy which held the particles back from mutually repelling at the speed of light, and the other is the speed of our consciousness along the bundle of strings comprising our bodies and brains.
Thus, we have two speeds of light perpendicular to one another or, the speed of light squared. We perceive the radiation as moving at the speed of light because there is only one speed of light involved, that of our consciousness. This ejection of protons from a nucleus at what we perceive as the speed of light also explains why such protons are found in cosmic rays.
So here we have a simple explanation of this most simple of formulae, why E = MC squared. But this can only be the case if my Theory Of Stationary Space is correct, and the speed of light is really the rate at which our consciousness moves along the bundles of strings comprising our bodies and brains.
Today, let's have a look at how another staple of basic physics proves that the cosmology scenario that I have presented must be correct.
We know that to accelerate an object to twice the velocity requires four times the force that it took to get the object to the original velocity. But why would this be so? Why wouldn't it only require twice the force to achieve twice the velocity, since it only requires twice the force to move the object twice the distance with a constant velocity?
The answer to this question requires that we delve into the cosmological structure which underlies the universe.
First this simple formula that, based on squares, that it requires four times the force to attain twice the acceleration, cannot be entirely correct. In Albert Einstein's well-proven Theories of Relativity, further acceleration as we approach the speed of light requires ever-greater applications of force until the moving object reaches the speed of light, at which point it would require an infinite force to accelerate it further which is, of course, impossible.
Since the speed of light is finite, the force necessary to accelerate at that point would also be finite if acceleration was based on such simple squares. This concept of four times the force being necessary to achieve twice the acceleration is fine for everyday non-relativistic applications, but it would actually require more than four times the force and so there must be other factors involved.
Now, let's have a look at some basic trigonometry. The tangent is one of the three fundamental functions of an angle. If we have a right angle with a horizontal axis, X, a vertical axis, Y, and a line from the same point of origin but between the two so that it forms a given angle with the X-axis, R, the three functions describe the relationship between the lines.
The sine function is the ratio of the lengths of the lines Y/R. The sine starts at zero at 0 degrees, because R would be the same as the X-axis at 0 degrees, and goes to 1 at 90 degrees because at that point it would be one and the same with the Y-axis.
The cosine function, the ratio of the lines X/R, is the opposite of the sine. The cosine starts at 1 at zero degrees, and goes to 0 at 90 degrees. As you may notice, the sine plus the cosine of any given angle always add up to 1.
The tangent function is the ratio of the two axes, Y/X, at any given angle between the two. The tangent starts at zero at 0 degrees, goes to 1 at 45 degrees because this is the halfway point to 90 degrees where the two axes would be equal, and goes to infinity at 90 degrees because at that point the Y-axis would be unlimited in length and the X-axis would not exist.
Now, do you notice how perfectly the tangent function of trigonometry matches the nature of acceleration? As the angle increases from zero, it's tangent also increases. But the increase in the tangent is out of proportion to the increase in the angle itself.
At very low angles, the tangent of the angle increases at approximately the same rate as the angle itself. But as the angle increases, the rate of the tangent increase exceeds the rate of increase in the angle itself. If the rate were proportional, the tangent of 45 degrees would be only 0.5, instead of 1, and the tangent of 90 degrees would be 1 instead of infinity.
Acceleration, particularly the force required to accelerate an object to higher velocities, can be seen to operate by the trigonometric tangent function. If low angles represent low velocities, the force required to attain higher velocities is a function of the tangents of the angles representing those velocities.
When we get close to the greatest possible velocity, what we perceive as the speed of light, the force required to get to higher velocities gets ever-greater, just as the tangents of angles approaching 90 degrees get ever-higher. Finally, if we can get the object to the speed of light, represented by a right angle of 90 degrees, the force required to get to higher velocities becomes infinite, just as the tangent of 90 degrees is infinite.
Now, let's go back to my cosmological theory. Remember that it explains matter as actually bundles of strings aligned mostly in one direction in space. That dimension is the dimension of space that we perceive as time. We experience only three of the spatial dimensions so we see these strings as the fundamental particles, such as electrons.
Time, at least as we know it, does not exist in absolute reality. We perceive time because our consciousness moves along the bundle of strings composing our bodies and brains. We perceive the speed of light as the maximum possible velocity because that is the speed at which our consciousness moves along the bundle of strings.
As I explained in detail in the cosmological theory, when we move an object we are actually bending it's bundle of strings so that it is at an angle to our bundle of strings. That way, we perceive it as moving further away as time passes.
This means that velocity is actually an angle of the bundle of strings composing the moving object. It then becomes clear why it requires ever-greater force to accelerate a moving object further, and the force required is a function of the tangent of the angle of the bending bundle of strings that we perceive as the moving object.
The actual reason why it takes an ever-increasing force to accelerate to higher velocities can be explained in terms of dimensions. An object at rest is ideally aligned in parallel to the force accelerating it. But as the object accelerates, it's dimensional set involves more and more the dimension of space that we perceive as time, into which we have no ability to project force. As the velocity of the object increases, the proportion of this inaccessible dimension in it's dimensional set also increases. This is why it requires ever more force to continue acceleration, until at what we perceive as the speed of light, it's entire dimensional set is out of our reach and further acceleration is impossible.
Suppose that you are trying to open a heavy door by pushing against it, but you can only push forward in a straight line. The swing of the door will occupy two dimensions, while your push will be over only one of those dimensions. At first, it will not take much force to open the door. But as the door opens wider, you will have to push with more and more force to get it to open the same angular amount. This is because the dimensional ratio of the door's opening gets more and more into the perpendicular dimension, into which you cannot exert force, at the expense of the dimension into which you can exert force. Exactly the same principles apply to the acceleration of any object.
How can this cosmological theory possible be wrong? It explains so many things from Newton to Einstein to this perfectly.
In my cosmological theory matter as we know it consists not of particles in three dimensions of space, as we perceive it, but as bundles of strings in four dimensions of space. The fourth dimension of space is what we experience as time, as our consciousness proceeds along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains at what seems to us to be the speed of light. There is no motion any more, other than that created by living things, after matter was thrown across the universe by the Big Bang. What we see as moving objects is actually bundles of strings that are not perfectly parallel to ours. As our consciousnesses progress along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains, the out-of-parallel bundles appears as an object in motion. The greater the angle between our bundle of strings and the other, the greater it's velocity will appear. The maximum possible velocity appears to us to be the speed of light, but that is because a right angle is the maximum possible angle and a bundle of strings aligned at a right angle to ours would appear as an object moving at the speed of light and that is because this is the speed at which our consciousness moves along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains.
Everything about the universe just seems to fall neatly into place around this scenario. The laws of Newton and the Theories of Relativity of Einstein were thus easily explained, not just as to the how that was already known but also as to why this was the way the universe is.
Today, I want to add more to this all-encompassing theory concerning how it also neatly explains the why of Kepler's Laws of Orbits.
Johannes (pronounced Yo-Han) Kepler was the 17th Century German astronomer and mathematician who surmised that orbits in space, of a moon around a planet or a planet around a star, were not circles but ellipses with the central planet or star at one foci of the ellipse. An ellipse is a flattened circle with two foci, instead of one. This was his First Law. Kepler's Second Law is that a line from the center of the planet to the center of the star sweeps over equal areas of space in equal periods of time, in other words it moves faster when it is closer to the star and slower when it is furthest away. The Third Law is that the cube of the planet's average distance to the star is proportional to the square of the time of the orbital period.
I have described how the sphere, or circle in two dimensions, is the default shape of the universe. If we put a significant amount of matter together, with no external forces present, it will form a sphere by gravity. The atoms of which matter is composed also forms spheres, as the electron orbitals within form circles. This default shape of the universe is described in the posting "Straight Lines And The Nature Of Space", on the cosmology blog.
So why do orbits form ellipses, as described by Kepler, instead of circles? It seemed very logical that an orbit should form a circle, with a constant distance, between the planet and star so where could these ellipses have come from? I suspected that the answer was to be found in this cosmological theory and, sure enough, that proved to be correct.
It is perfectly logical that orbits should be circles, since that is the default shape of the universe. But remember that there are actually four dimensions of space. We see orbits as tilted at various angles around the central body in three dimensions, but the orbits are actually tilted in four dimensions. Since we perceive one of those dimensions as time, rather than space, this causes us to see elliptical orbits in space but with the orbiting body moving faster when it is closer so that it ends up balancing mathematically with, according to Kepler's Second Law, a line from the center of the planet to the center of the star sweeping over equal areas of space in equal periods of time.
The orbiting moon or planet appears to us as three-dimensional, but it's orbital plane is only two dimensions. So, we see the orbiting body continuously and it does not shrink in size or disappear when it is more in the fourth dimension that we perceive as time, at least not at velocities well below the speed of light. But it's orbit is tilted somewhat into the dimension that we cannot see. The result is that, as our consciousnesses move along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains, we see more velocity but less space when the orbital plane is tilted more into the fourth dimension and less velocity and more space when the orbital path is tilted less into the fourth dimension that we experience as time.
Picture holding a plate and tilting it upward, with one end higher than the other. A point on one side of the plate will be the lowest or closest to the floor, and the diametrically opposite point will be the highest or furthest from the floor. The other two dimensions, across the plate and through the center of it, will remain unchanged.
The plate is always circular but if you could see it in only the other two dimensions, it would look like an ellipse due to the tilt in the other dimension. In the same way, one side of an orbit it tilted toward the dimension that we perceive as time and the other side is tilted away from it. This is why aphelion, the highest but slowest point of the orbit, and perihelion, the lowest but fastest point of the orbit, are always on diametrically opposite sides of the orbit.
This example of the tilted plate is somewhat simpler than the reality of one body in orbit around another because, from our perspective, none of the orbital plane is outside the fourth dimension altogether. If it were, there would be a point in the orbital path where the orbiting body becomes stationary and that is not seen to occur in reality. The orbital plane is actually tilted with regard to the fourth dimension of space that we perceive as time so that one side of the orbit, which we see as the highest point of the orbit where the orbiting body is moving the slowest, is the least within the fourth dimension and the most within our familiar three spatial dimensions. The opposite side of the orbital path, the lowest point of the orbit where the orbiting body moves the fastest, is the most within the fourth dimension and the least within our familiar three spatial dimensions.
As for Kepler's Third Law, that the cube of the average distance between the planet and the sun is always proportional to the square of the orbital time period, why should one side be squared while the other is cubed?
To answer this, lets review the familiar Pythagorean Theorem. This is the rule that in a right triangle, which is a triangle with one right angle, the sum of the squares of the length of the two legs equals the square of the hypotenuse (the diagonal line, which is the longest of the three). In other words, C squared = A squared + B squared.
The reason that each element of both sides has to be squared is that, even though the lines that we are dealing with are one-dimensional, the triangle itself is two-dimensional. We will not get a correct answer by stating that C = A + B, because it does not take the second dimension into account. A line is one-dimensional, but the sheet of paper or computer screen on which the triangle is represented is two-dimensional.
But, back to Kepler's Third Law, why is one side of the equation squared while the other is cubed? It can only mean that there is another dimension involved, which we do not see. An orbital path is two-dimensional in the space that it encloses, yet it has to be cubed in the equation.
The only way that an orbit could appear circular to us is if were not tilted at all in the dimension of space that we perceive as time. But if that were the case, the orbiting planet or moon would seem to be traveling at the speed of light in it's orbit because, while it's bundle of strings might be close to parallel to ours, it's orbital path would be at a right angle to our bundle of strings. There would appear to be no time dimension at all, and it would go around it's orbit in the briefest instant.
This, in fact, brings us to quantum physics. We cannot really discern electrons in their orbitals around the atomic nucleus. There seems to be a "cloud" of electrons that is everywhere at once, even though the orbitals can be described mathematically.
This can be explained by the size scale of atoms and our movement along our bundles of strings at what we perceive as the speed of light. We can thus discern no time element in electron orbitals and we are looking edgewise at the string of the electron wrapped around the central nucleus.
To make this more mind-bending, if we could travel ourselves at the speed of light we would see the tilt of the orbits of moons around planets and planets around stars reversed in relation to what we see now. The earth is closest to the sun in January, and furthest away in June. But to a spacecraft passing by at near the speed of light, it would be the other way around. Einstein didn't notice this but in all fairness to him, he came up with his Special Theory of Relativity in 1905 and was not around when the idea of strings became popular.
What about the relativistic shortening that Einstein did notice? This stipulates that, when an object approaches the speed of light, it will appear to be shortening in length. There must be the same number and arrangement of atoms in an object, as it approaches the speed of light, yet it must grow shorter in length. This theory explains it perfectly.
The electron orbitals in atoms become increasingly tilted into the dimension that we perceive as time so that, as there is increasing velocity, the object appears to shorten. As the bundle of strings of the object approaches a right angle alignment to us, that we perceive as the speed of light, it will appear to become shorter in length, it is a matter of simple trigonometric functions. The shortening takes place when the cotangent of the angle of the bundle of strings of the object to us reaches the size scale of atoms. There is no shortening at slower speeds because only the plane of the orbital path is tilted away from us, the atoms are spherical and still facing us.
What about man-made satellites, in orbit around the earth? These also tend to have an elliptical orbit with an apogee and perigee. But if we can move only in our three spatial dimensions, and an elliptical orbit means it must be tilted into the dimension of space that we perceive as time, how can a man-made object get any momentum in the fourth dimension?
The answer is explained in the posting on this blog, "Why We Perceive The Speed Of Light" in the section "Achieving The Speed Of Light". Our consciousness is moving along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains along the dimension that we experience as time. Whenever we do anything, unless we can do it instantly, involving no time at all, we inevitably and involuntarily impart some of that momentum into whatever we do.
In closing, elliptical orbits of moons around planets and of planets around stars show that this theory is correct in that matter consists of strings aligned mostly in our three dimensions of space, but also in another dimension of space that we perceive as time. If orbits can be ellipses, of various tilts and eccentricities as long as Kepler's Laws hold, this can only mean that time and space are actually interchangeable. The default shape of the universe is a sphere or circle and, as Galileo pointed out, this would be the logical form of any orbit. This appears incorrect in our usual three dimensions, but falls into place when we consider the fourth dimension that we perceive as time.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Cosmic Rays And Relativity
The term "cosmic rays" is actually somewhat of a misnomer. Cosmic rays are really particles of matter, and not electromagnetic radiation. Cosmic rays are not the same thing as the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation from the Big Bang, which began the universe. Most cosmic ray particles are believed to be protons. Alpha particles, helium nuclei, are also present and there are some nuclei of heavier elements.
There is a basic conundrum with Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity involving these cosmic ray particles. According to Einstein's theory, an object moving at the speed of light would have infinite mass. Then according to Newton's Laws, the gravitational pull of an object is proportional to it's mass, so that an object with infinite mass should also have infinite gravity.
Yet, there are numerous particles in cosmic rays that have mass and move at, or near, the speed of light but do not have infinite gravity. If they did, they would twist the entire universe around with their gravity. Every such particle would be, essentially, a miniature black hole.
It does not matter how small these particles are, they should still have infinite gravity if they have the infinite mass that they should have if they were moving at the speed of light. A millionth of infinity is still infinity. The muons formed in the earth's atmosphere by cosmic ray collisions display relativistic effects, such as time dilation.
But yet, these particles clearly do not have infinite gravity, or any great gravitational pull at all. This must mean that Einstein's relativistic mass describes the increasing difficulty of accelerating the mass to higher velocities, but not the gravitational pull of that mass.
Consider also that the earth's magnetic field, which is relatively weak, deflects the particles in cosmic rays. How could it possibly do so if the particles had the tremendous mass that relativity theory postulates they should? Cosmic ray particles follow the earth's magnetic lines of force, which come together at the magnetic poles, creating the northern lights at the north magnetic pole.
The reason that cosmic ray particles do not have such extreme gravity is explained by my cosmological theory. I explain how the speed of light does not really exist, it is only the apparent speed of light that we perceive. So, the infinite relativistic mass of an object moving at the apparent speed of light is not really infinite, it is only apparently infinite.
An object that we perceive as moving at the speed of light is actually only a bundle of strings at right angles to our bundle of strings so that we perceive it as moving at the speed at which our consciousness is actually moving along the bundle of strings composing our bodies and brains.
We also perceive the entire length of the strings at one instant, instead of only one point on the strings every instant as we would if the bundle of strings were parallel to our bundle. This causes us the perceive the bundle of strings as having infinite mass while moving at the speed of light. The infinite comes from the essentially infinite length of the strings in the bundle.
Remember that the speed of light is really an angle, a 90 degree angle, and not a speed. We experience one dimension of space as time as our consciousness moves along our bundle of strings aligned primarily in that dimension. This causes us to perceive strings as particles, because there is one dimension of space that we cannot see but experience as time.
There actually is apparently infinite mass in an object or particle moving at what we perceive as the speed of light. But, in my theory, this is balanced by the fact that it's mass is spread over an infinite distance, the theoretical length of the strings composing the object.
If this model of the universe that I have presented were not correct, the gravity produced by the relativistic mass of cosmic ray particles should be warping and twisting the universe with their near-infinite gravitational pull, yet this is clearly not the case. Relativistic mass is only apparent mass, because the speed of light is only the apparent speed of light.
The relativistic mass of Einstein's theory is entirely a matter of perception. We would perceive an object moving at the speed of light as having infinite mass, but it would not perceive itself as having infinite mass. Instead, it would perceive us as having infinite mass. So, there is no real infinite mass. If there were, it would pull the entire universe in around it.
This is because, as my theory points out, there is no real speed of light to bring about relativistic mass. It is only something that we perceive. Einstein has a remarkable record of being right, but he explained how things would appear rather than how things actually are.
The speed of light, and all of the effects associated with it, is only a right angle between two bundles of strings as our consciousness rushes by on one of the bundles. This is why cosmic ray particles moving at, or near, the speed of light do not manifest anything like the infinite gravity that they should if they truly did have infinite mass.
What about kinetic energy? A particle with infinite mass should also have infinite kinetic energy, since that is proportional to it's velocity and it's mass. Yet, this is not the case either and it shows that the relativistic effects associated with the speed of light are only apparent because, as my theory describes, the speed of light itself is only apparent. It is only something that we perceive.
How does a nuclear reaction relate to relativity?
When an atom is split, the two resulting positively-charged nuclei will seek to get away from each other as efficiently as possible, in the shortest possible distance, without the binding energy to hold them together any longer. This is because like charges repel. The way to accomplish this is for the two new nuclei to go in diametrically opposite directions. This basically means that the bundle of strings comprising the whole nuclei will bend at right angles.
Since a right angle in four (or more) dimensional space is perceived by us as an object moving at the speed of light, the two new nuclei will seem to move in opposite directions from one another at the speed of light. This is why Einstein's formula for such releases of energy from matter is E = MC squared.
As I described in the posting on this blog, "Basic Physics And Cosmology", the C in the formula is for the speed of light, or Constant, is squared meaning that there must be two speeds of light. One is for the movement of our consciousness, and the other is for the sudden right angle formed by the new nuclei. The right angle forms the square in the formula.
The tremendous energy of the reaction is from particles, moving at what we perceive as the speed of light, colliding with other matter, and transferring it's kinetic energy to it.
This all makes sense for the E = MC squared, but what about the relativistic mass and it's energy implications for the two new nuclei? The concept that no matter can ever move at the speed of light, because it would have infinite mass at that point and so would require an infinite force to propel it to higher speeds, and such an infinite force is impossible, cannot possibly be correct.
The two new nuclei, resulting from the split of the larger atom, must initially move at what we perceive as the speed of light, at least until they collide with other matter, or else it would not be squared in Einstein's formula. If it really required an infinite force to accelerate matter to the speed of light, binding energy would have to be infinite. Since the universe is finite and does not have an infinite amount of energy in it, that would mean that atoms are not even possible.
Clearly, that is not the case.
What about the relativistic mass of the two new nuclei moving at the apparent speed of light? Going back to the finite binding energy in the nucleus, there would not have been the supposedly infinite energy required to accelerate the new nuclei to the apparent speed of light.
Furthermore, if it took an infinite amount of energy to accelerate the new nuclei from the split atom to the speed of light, then the kinetic energy possessed by these nuclei should be infinite. That should mean that a single small nuclear reactor would be able to provide much more than all of the energy requirements of the entire world.
Once again, clearly this is not the case.
So, these relativistic rules of Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity cannot mean that it actually takes an infinite amount of energy to accelerate a particle or nuclei to what we perceive as the speed of light, or that the particle or nuclei would possess infinite kinetic energy if it did move at the speed of light.
We can only conclude that relativistic effects are correct, but that is only the way that it appears to us and not the way that reality actually is. The reason for this discrepancy is, as my cosmological theory describes, that the speed of light, upon which relativity is based, is not real but only something that we perceive.
I would like to write some more about the connection between cosmic rays and relativity.
Has anyone ever wondered about what relationship there might be between electric charges and the speed of light? In Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, the ordinary laws of physics break down as we approach the speed of light. These include the rules governing mass, time and, distance. If the most fundamental aspect of the physical universe is the rules of electric charges of which everything is ultimately composed, then why shouldn't the rules of these charges, that opposite charges attract and like charges repel, also be affected by the speed of light? Gravity is a force, but every planet or other gravitational mass has an escape velocity. Doesn't it also make sense that the rules of the positive and negative electric charges begin to change, with the other laws of physics, when the speed of light becomes involved?
Consider the phenomenon known as cosmic ray spallation. We know that heavier elements are cooked up under the extreme heat and pressure in the centers of stars as smaller atoms are crunched together into larger ones. If the star explodes in a supernova, these heavier atoms are scattered across space as cosmic dust. The atoms are thus exposed to the cosmic rays in space, and some of the heavier atoms may be broken back down into lighter elements as the high-speed protons and alpha particles strike the nucleus of an atom and the force splits the atom into two smaller ones.
The term "cosmic rays" is actually a misnomer from the days when it was thought to be electromagnetic radiation. Cosmic rays are actually positively-charged particles, mostly protons and alpha particles, travelling at nearly the speed of light. An alpha particle is essentially a helium nucleus.
Here is the question which immediately arises. We use neutrons as high-speed "bullets" in nuclear reactors to split atoms by striking the nucleus because the electron has a neutral electric charge and so will not be diverted from it's course by like-charge repulsion with either the positively-charged nucleus of a target atom or the negatively-charged electrons in orbitals around that atom. So how then can a positively-charged cosmic ray particle strike a nucleus, which is also positively-charged, so that it can split the nucleus in two? Wouldn't like-charge repulsion prevent that from happening?
We saw the reason why the speed of light is squared, or multiplied by itself in the most famous formula of the Twentieth Century E = MC squared. This means that energy equal mass multiplied by the speed of light squared. In other words, a small amount of matter is equivalent to a tremendous amount of energy.
My theory defines what we perceive as the speed of light as simply a right angle to the directional alignment of the bundles of strings comprising our bodies and brains. A particle, which is actually a string, will seem to us to be a particle rushing past at the speed of light if it is at a right angle to our bundles of strings. It is actually our consciousness which is moving along the bundles of strings comprising our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light. This is why the speed of light is in E = MC squared the first time.
The second speed of light in the formula is the direction which two like-charges go, to get away from each other with maximum efficiency, when the binding energy in a nucleus is suddenly released as the nucleus is split. Each would go in a straight line, in diametrically opposite directions. Since the nucleus was actually a bundle of strings in four-dimensional space, this would mean that the path of each freed positively-charged section of the nucleus would fly off at a right angle to the bundle of strings into which it had previously been bound. This would appear to us as if both were moving in directions opposite to one another at the speed of light.
The speed of light of our consciousness and that of the newly-freed like-charged sections of the nucleus which has been split are at right angles to one another because our consciousness is moving along the bundle and the two freed sections of the nucleus with like electric charge are moving away from one another with the maximum efficiency, which is opposite directions along a straight line which is at a right angle to the bundle within which they were previously bound to one another. There is no speed greater than the speed of light simply because there is no angle greater than a right angle.
The heat generated by a nuclear reaction results from the split sections of the nucleus moving outward at the speed of light, equivalent to a right angle, but then imparting momentum to the numerous other strings (perceived as particles) with which it collides. Heat is the kinetic energy of all of those particles. So, if matter and antimatter, where the electric charges are reversed from ordinary matter, are brought into contact the result is a tremendous burst of energy and mutual annihilation. If two like-charged particles, such as protons in a nucleus, are bound together by binding energy but then suddenly released, they will put distance between themselves with maximum efficiency by moving apart at what we perceive as the speed of light.
We can thus see how the behavior of electric charges, specifically like-charge repulsion, is related to the speed of light. So, it should then make sense that we can turn this around and overcome the rules of electric charges with the speed of light. Special Relativity stipulates that the fundamental laws of physics break down as we approach the speed of light. Everything in the universe is ultimately based on these fundamental electric charges. So doesn't it make sense that the changing of the rules as we approach the speed of light would be based on a changing of the rules of electric charges as we approach the speed of light?
The reason that the basic rules of attraction and repulsion of electric charges must change as we approach the speed of light, and change the other laws of physics along with it, is based on simple geometry. If we consider two electric charges as two adjacent strings, the more parallel the two the greater should be the attraction or repulsion between them. If the two strings intersect at a right angle, the attraction of opposite charges or repulsion of like charges would be at a minimum.
We can see in my theory that the speed of light is actually a right angle, and that it is the greatest possible speed simply because a right angle is the greatest possible angle. The laws of physics break down as we approach the speed of light simply because all of those laws are ultimately based on the underlying electric charges which comprise everything and the rules of electric charges change at what we perceive as the speed of light due to simple geometry, showing that matter is indeed composed of strings even though we perceive them as particles.
This is why cosmic ray spallation can take place, because cosmic rays are moving at near the speed of light even though the rules of electric charges state that the positively-charged nucleus and the positively-charged particle should mutually repel. They do not repel because such repulsion mean two like-charged strings bending at right angles in opposite directions, to maximize the distance between them, and the two are already at a right angle because the speed of light is really a right angle.
The true nature of cosmic rays was not known in 1905, when Einstein introduced the Special Theory of Relativity, or he may have included this in the theory.
There is a basic conundrum with Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity involving these cosmic ray particles. According to Einstein's theory, an object moving at the speed of light would have infinite mass. Then according to Newton's Laws, the gravitational pull of an object is proportional to it's mass, so that an object with infinite mass should also have infinite gravity.
Yet, there are numerous particles in cosmic rays that have mass and move at, or near, the speed of light but do not have infinite gravity. If they did, they would twist the entire universe around with their gravity. Every such particle would be, essentially, a miniature black hole.
It does not matter how small these particles are, they should still have infinite gravity if they have the infinite mass that they should have if they were moving at the speed of light. A millionth of infinity is still infinity. The muons formed in the earth's atmosphere by cosmic ray collisions display relativistic effects, such as time dilation.
But yet, these particles clearly do not have infinite gravity, or any great gravitational pull at all. This must mean that Einstein's relativistic mass describes the increasing difficulty of accelerating the mass to higher velocities, but not the gravitational pull of that mass.
Consider also that the earth's magnetic field, which is relatively weak, deflects the particles in cosmic rays. How could it possibly do so if the particles had the tremendous mass that relativity theory postulates they should? Cosmic ray particles follow the earth's magnetic lines of force, which come together at the magnetic poles, creating the northern lights at the north magnetic pole.
The reason that cosmic ray particles do not have such extreme gravity is explained by my cosmological theory. I explain how the speed of light does not really exist, it is only the apparent speed of light that we perceive. So, the infinite relativistic mass of an object moving at the apparent speed of light is not really infinite, it is only apparently infinite.
An object that we perceive as moving at the speed of light is actually only a bundle of strings at right angles to our bundle of strings so that we perceive it as moving at the speed at which our consciousness is actually moving along the bundle of strings composing our bodies and brains.
We also perceive the entire length of the strings at one instant, instead of only one point on the strings every instant as we would if the bundle of strings were parallel to our bundle. This causes us the perceive the bundle of strings as having infinite mass while moving at the speed of light. The infinite comes from the essentially infinite length of the strings in the bundle.
Remember that the speed of light is really an angle, a 90 degree angle, and not a speed. We experience one dimension of space as time as our consciousness moves along our bundle of strings aligned primarily in that dimension. This causes us to perceive strings as particles, because there is one dimension of space that we cannot see but experience as time.
There actually is apparently infinite mass in an object or particle moving at what we perceive as the speed of light. But, in my theory, this is balanced by the fact that it's mass is spread over an infinite distance, the theoretical length of the strings composing the object.
If this model of the universe that I have presented were not correct, the gravity produced by the relativistic mass of cosmic ray particles should be warping and twisting the universe with their near-infinite gravitational pull, yet this is clearly not the case. Relativistic mass is only apparent mass, because the speed of light is only the apparent speed of light.
The relativistic mass of Einstein's theory is entirely a matter of perception. We would perceive an object moving at the speed of light as having infinite mass, but it would not perceive itself as having infinite mass. Instead, it would perceive us as having infinite mass. So, there is no real infinite mass. If there were, it would pull the entire universe in around it.
This is because, as my theory points out, there is no real speed of light to bring about relativistic mass. It is only something that we perceive. Einstein has a remarkable record of being right, but he explained how things would appear rather than how things actually are.
The speed of light, and all of the effects associated with it, is only a right angle between two bundles of strings as our consciousness rushes by on one of the bundles. This is why cosmic ray particles moving at, or near, the speed of light do not manifest anything like the infinite gravity that they should if they truly did have infinite mass.
What about kinetic energy? A particle with infinite mass should also have infinite kinetic energy, since that is proportional to it's velocity and it's mass. Yet, this is not the case either and it shows that the relativistic effects associated with the speed of light are only apparent because, as my theory describes, the speed of light itself is only apparent. It is only something that we perceive.
How does a nuclear reaction relate to relativity?
When an atom is split, the two resulting positively-charged nuclei will seek to get away from each other as efficiently as possible, in the shortest possible distance, without the binding energy to hold them together any longer. This is because like charges repel. The way to accomplish this is for the two new nuclei to go in diametrically opposite directions. This basically means that the bundle of strings comprising the whole nuclei will bend at right angles.
Since a right angle in four (or more) dimensional space is perceived by us as an object moving at the speed of light, the two new nuclei will seem to move in opposite directions from one another at the speed of light. This is why Einstein's formula for such releases of energy from matter is E = MC squared.
As I described in the posting on this blog, "Basic Physics And Cosmology", the C in the formula is for the speed of light, or Constant, is squared meaning that there must be two speeds of light. One is for the movement of our consciousness, and the other is for the sudden right angle formed by the new nuclei. The right angle forms the square in the formula.
The tremendous energy of the reaction is from particles, moving at what we perceive as the speed of light, colliding with other matter, and transferring it's kinetic energy to it.
This all makes sense for the E = MC squared, but what about the relativistic mass and it's energy implications for the two new nuclei? The concept that no matter can ever move at the speed of light, because it would have infinite mass at that point and so would require an infinite force to propel it to higher speeds, and such an infinite force is impossible, cannot possibly be correct.
The two new nuclei, resulting from the split of the larger atom, must initially move at what we perceive as the speed of light, at least until they collide with other matter, or else it would not be squared in Einstein's formula. If it really required an infinite force to accelerate matter to the speed of light, binding energy would have to be infinite. Since the universe is finite and does not have an infinite amount of energy in it, that would mean that atoms are not even possible.
Clearly, that is not the case.
What about the relativistic mass of the two new nuclei moving at the apparent speed of light? Going back to the finite binding energy in the nucleus, there would not have been the supposedly infinite energy required to accelerate the new nuclei to the apparent speed of light.
Furthermore, if it took an infinite amount of energy to accelerate the new nuclei from the split atom to the speed of light, then the kinetic energy possessed by these nuclei should be infinite. That should mean that a single small nuclear reactor would be able to provide much more than all of the energy requirements of the entire world.
Once again, clearly this is not the case.
So, these relativistic rules of Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity cannot mean that it actually takes an infinite amount of energy to accelerate a particle or nuclei to what we perceive as the speed of light, or that the particle or nuclei would possess infinite kinetic energy if it did move at the speed of light.
We can only conclude that relativistic effects are correct, but that is only the way that it appears to us and not the way that reality actually is. The reason for this discrepancy is, as my cosmological theory describes, that the speed of light, upon which relativity is based, is not real but only something that we perceive.
I would like to write some more about the connection between cosmic rays and relativity.
Has anyone ever wondered about what relationship there might be between electric charges and the speed of light? In Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity, the ordinary laws of physics break down as we approach the speed of light. These include the rules governing mass, time and, distance. If the most fundamental aspect of the physical universe is the rules of electric charges of which everything is ultimately composed, then why shouldn't the rules of these charges, that opposite charges attract and like charges repel, also be affected by the speed of light? Gravity is a force, but every planet or other gravitational mass has an escape velocity. Doesn't it also make sense that the rules of the positive and negative electric charges begin to change, with the other laws of physics, when the speed of light becomes involved?
Consider the phenomenon known as cosmic ray spallation. We know that heavier elements are cooked up under the extreme heat and pressure in the centers of stars as smaller atoms are crunched together into larger ones. If the star explodes in a supernova, these heavier atoms are scattered across space as cosmic dust. The atoms are thus exposed to the cosmic rays in space, and some of the heavier atoms may be broken back down into lighter elements as the high-speed protons and alpha particles strike the nucleus of an atom and the force splits the atom into two smaller ones.
The term "cosmic rays" is actually a misnomer from the days when it was thought to be electromagnetic radiation. Cosmic rays are actually positively-charged particles, mostly protons and alpha particles, travelling at nearly the speed of light. An alpha particle is essentially a helium nucleus.
Here is the question which immediately arises. We use neutrons as high-speed "bullets" in nuclear reactors to split atoms by striking the nucleus because the electron has a neutral electric charge and so will not be diverted from it's course by like-charge repulsion with either the positively-charged nucleus of a target atom or the negatively-charged electrons in orbitals around that atom. So how then can a positively-charged cosmic ray particle strike a nucleus, which is also positively-charged, so that it can split the nucleus in two? Wouldn't like-charge repulsion prevent that from happening?
We saw the reason why the speed of light is squared, or multiplied by itself in the most famous formula of the Twentieth Century E = MC squared. This means that energy equal mass multiplied by the speed of light squared. In other words, a small amount of matter is equivalent to a tremendous amount of energy.
My theory defines what we perceive as the speed of light as simply a right angle to the directional alignment of the bundles of strings comprising our bodies and brains. A particle, which is actually a string, will seem to us to be a particle rushing past at the speed of light if it is at a right angle to our bundles of strings. It is actually our consciousness which is moving along the bundles of strings comprising our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light. This is why the speed of light is in E = MC squared the first time.
The second speed of light in the formula is the direction which two like-charges go, to get away from each other with maximum efficiency, when the binding energy in a nucleus is suddenly released as the nucleus is split. Each would go in a straight line, in diametrically opposite directions. Since the nucleus was actually a bundle of strings in four-dimensional space, this would mean that the path of each freed positively-charged section of the nucleus would fly off at a right angle to the bundle of strings into which it had previously been bound. This would appear to us as if both were moving in directions opposite to one another at the speed of light.
The speed of light of our consciousness and that of the newly-freed like-charged sections of the nucleus which has been split are at right angles to one another because our consciousness is moving along the bundle and the two freed sections of the nucleus with like electric charge are moving away from one another with the maximum efficiency, which is opposite directions along a straight line which is at a right angle to the bundle within which they were previously bound to one another. There is no speed greater than the speed of light simply because there is no angle greater than a right angle.
The heat generated by a nuclear reaction results from the split sections of the nucleus moving outward at the speed of light, equivalent to a right angle, but then imparting momentum to the numerous other strings (perceived as particles) with which it collides. Heat is the kinetic energy of all of those particles. So, if matter and antimatter, where the electric charges are reversed from ordinary matter, are brought into contact the result is a tremendous burst of energy and mutual annihilation. If two like-charged particles, such as protons in a nucleus, are bound together by binding energy but then suddenly released, they will put distance between themselves with maximum efficiency by moving apart at what we perceive as the speed of light.
We can thus see how the behavior of electric charges, specifically like-charge repulsion, is related to the speed of light. So, it should then make sense that we can turn this around and overcome the rules of electric charges with the speed of light. Special Relativity stipulates that the fundamental laws of physics break down as we approach the speed of light. Everything in the universe is ultimately based on these fundamental electric charges. So doesn't it make sense that the changing of the rules as we approach the speed of light would be based on a changing of the rules of electric charges as we approach the speed of light?
The reason that the basic rules of attraction and repulsion of electric charges must change as we approach the speed of light, and change the other laws of physics along with it, is based on simple geometry. If we consider two electric charges as two adjacent strings, the more parallel the two the greater should be the attraction or repulsion between them. If the two strings intersect at a right angle, the attraction of opposite charges or repulsion of like charges would be at a minimum.
We can see in my theory that the speed of light is actually a right angle, and that it is the greatest possible speed simply because a right angle is the greatest possible angle. The laws of physics break down as we approach the speed of light simply because all of those laws are ultimately based on the underlying electric charges which comprise everything and the rules of electric charges change at what we perceive as the speed of light due to simple geometry, showing that matter is indeed composed of strings even though we perceive them as particles.
This is why cosmic ray spallation can take place, because cosmic rays are moving at near the speed of light even though the rules of electric charges state that the positively-charged nucleus and the positively-charged particle should mutually repel. They do not repel because such repulsion mean two like-charged strings bending at right angles in opposite directions, to maximize the distance between them, and the two are already at a right angle because the speed of light is really a right angle.
The true nature of cosmic rays was not known in 1905, when Einstein introduced the Special Theory of Relativity, or he may have included this in the theory.
Gravity And Time
In my Theory Of Stationary Space, matter consists of bundles of strings in background space of at least four dimensions. One of these spatial dimensions is what we experience as time because our consciousness moves along the bundles of strings comprising our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light. This causes us to see matter as consisting of particles rather than strings, such as electrons and quarks, because we can only see in three of the (at least) four dimensions. This also explains why the speed of light seems to be the maximum possible speed, but we have no physical explanation of why this speed is what it is.
As I have described, the spatial direction of our time flow moves away from the Big Bang because we perceive this as the beginning of the universe. Even though it is space which separates us from the Big Bang, we perceive it as time because it lies in the direction along which our bundles of strings are aligned, and along which our consciousness moves.
I am certain that we are traveling in the "right" direction as far as time goes. After all, the Big Bang was the beginning of the universe and it seems logical that our direction of time flow in space should be away from it.
But even so, it wouldn't be breaking any basic rules if our experience of time flowed in the opposite direction, toward the Big Bang, since time is really a dimension of space. But what would it look like to us if this opposite time direction were the case? What would the basic laws of physics be like to us?
To begin with, since what we perceive as time is actually a dimension of space, if it were reversed then the other spatial directions would have to be reversed also. North would be what was south, and east would be what was west.
The significant thing about this thought experiment of having our time flow in the opposite direction along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains is what it reveals about gravity. As it is now, we see objects apart but waiting to be pulled together by gravity. If time were reversed, we would see objects together but waiting to fall apart.
The point of this is that gravity is actually a function of time. It is true that gravity is an attractive force as long as time moves forward. However, I think that I have shown beyond any doubt that time is anything but absolute. It is only something that we perceive as our consciousness moves along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light. Since gravity must be a function of time, because gravity creates motion and motion is a function of time, the revelation that time does not really exist, but is only the way that we perceive a dimension of space, forces us to redefine gravity.
It is important to understand that to grasp this concept, we must eliminate from our minds all of the "new motion" that comes from living things. This includes anything constructed by, or altered by, living things. Nothing in inanimate reality is really in motion, or has been in motion since it was thrown out across space by the Big Bang. But living things came along with the ability to move things and make changes to the environment, this is referred to as "new motion".
I explained that while the principle of entropy is often cited as proof that time can never be reversed, this is really not the case because all meaningful examples of entropy involve either living things or things made by living things. One example is the bottle of ink placed in an aquarium filled with water, the ink flows out of the bottle and mixes with the water much more easily than it flows back into the bottle. But this involves items made by and altered by living things (us), it only shows that our time direction is not reversible. It does not apply to inanimate matter.
The point of this concept is that the universe is neutral with respect to gravity, whether it is an attractive or a repulsive force depends on which time direction that we move in. Living things are designed to move in one time direction only. If we were to reverse time as I am describing here, we would not have people walking backward.
Moving in our time direction away from the Big Bang, we see the gravity of a star's mass crunching together smaller atoms into larger ones. If we moved in the opposite time direction, we would see larger atoms being pulled apart by gravity into smaller ones.
If the flow of time were reversed, nuclear fusion would be replaced by fission. In the present time direction, we perceive the extreme gravity in centers of stars overpowering the electron repulsion of electromagnetism to crunch small atoms together into larger ones. If time were reversed, we would perceive the gravity in centers of stars as overpowering the strong nuclear force in pulling large atoms apart into smaller ones.
The nuclear binding energy curve, of the binding energy holding nuclei together, would be inverted. Stars would seem to generate energy by fission, rather than fusion, but the fission would result from reversed gravity, and not from neutrons colliding with the nucleus. Instead of smaller atoms being crunched together, and releasing excess binding energy when they combine to form a larger atom, it would be inverted in that the energy would appear to be released when the larger atom is pulled apart by reverse gravity. Since gravity works with the strong nuclear force to fuse atoms, if gravity were inverted the binding energy curve would also be inverted.
In the opposite time direction, gravity would work against the strong nuclear force, which binds atomic nuclei against the electromagnetic repulsion of like-charged protons. The creation of elements from one another involves a competition between the basic forces of nature. In our present time direction, gravity in the center of a star works against the electromagnetic repulsion that keeps atoms separate by the like charges of the electrons in neighboring atoms.
Thus, electromagnetism dominates until the sheer mass of the star allows gravity to overwhelm it. If time were reversed, we would perceive the balance of forces as having shifted. Gravity would now be working against the strong nuclear force, which binds atomic nuclei together, rather than against electromagnetism. There would still be the competition between the strong nuclear force and electromagnetism, concerning the formation of elements from one another, but gravity would have changed sides.
The electromagnetic force and the nuclear forces would not be changed if our time flow was in the opposite direction. Like charges would still repel, and opposite charges would still attract. Negative would still be negative, and a positive charge would still be positive. The strong nuclear force would still provide the binding energy to hold the like-charged protons together against electromagnetic repulsion in the nucleus. It is only gravity that would be different.
Picture space as something like a rubber sheet, and this makes perfect sense considering the well-proven Lense-Thirring Effect described by Einstein, otherwise known as "frame-dragging". The simplest way of proving that space actually behaves like a fabric is that a satellite in orbit around the earth will have it's position gradually shifted by the rotation of the earth because this rotation pulls the sorrounding space with it, to some degree. My cosmological theory describes space as infinitesimal alternating negative and positive charges in multiple dimensions, so it makes sense that it can be "pulled" to a certain extent.
My conclusion is that if the rotation of a planet can have an effect on space by "pulling" it along with the rotation, what about the expansion of the entire universe? This expansion has got to have some local effects that we can observe or measure. Whether the universe, as a whole, is expanding or contracting depends, of course, on which way our time direction is flowing.
When we move away from the Big Bang in time, as we do, we perceive the universe as expanding but gravity as an attractive force, pulling matter together, on a local scale. The local effect opposes the state of the universe as a whole. this is rather like pulling a rubber band so that it expands, and the band tries to counteract this by contracting.
If our time direction was toward the Big Bang, we would perceive just the opposite. The universe would seem to be contracting, as a whole, but gravity would be counteracting this by acting as a repulsive force. This would be like squeezing a rubber ball so that the ball tries to counteract by pushing outward.
This scenario does imply that gravity must be getting stronger, from our point of view, as we move along in our present time flow direction. Although this occurs much too slowly for us to perceive. This strengthening is because the space in the material universe is becoming more stretched by it's expansion, and it tries to resist this stretching. If we were moving in the opposite time direction, gravity would be getting weaker while the universe was contracting, until it could not hold matter together at all.
Gravity would actually be more complex than simple attraction or repulsion, because of the apparent expansion or contraction of the universe, according to our direction of time flow. In the opposite time direction, gravity would seem to be a repulsive force on a local scale, but an attractive force in the universe as a whole, because the universe would appear to be contracting.
This means that we could describe gravity in terms of osmosis. This is a chemical and biological principle that apparently has nothing to do with gravity, but provides an excellent analogy. In a simple example of osmosis, if salt is concentrated in a certain portion of a volume of water, osmosis will tend to move water into the concentration until the salt is evenly distributed in the water.
In the opposite time direction gravity would be an osmotic force, trying to even the distribution of matter in space by repulsion at the local level and attraction in the universe as a whole. In our present time direction, away from the Big Bang, gravity can be described as a clumping force, or anti-osmotic. It pulls matter together locally, even as the universe expands as a whole. The "clumps" of matter held together by gravity would be groups of galaxies.
What about the time dimension of space? I mean the dimension of space along which the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains are aligned. This is the dimension going toward and away from the Big Bang. The universe is neither expanding nor contracting in that dimension. Therefore, according to this theory, there should be no gravity in that dimension.
But what about cosmic rays? These rays, which are not really rays but particles of matter, bombard us from all directions in space, and move at, or close to, the speed of light. Now according to Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity, a body moving at the speed of light should have infinite mass. Since gravity is proprtional to mass, it should also have infinite gravity. This should be true even for a sub-atomic particle. These cosmic ray particles are particles with mass, not massless neutrinos.
By the way, I discussed this in depth in the posting "Cosmic Rays And Relativity" and how it proves that my cosmological model must be correct.
Obviously, the particles comprising cosmic rays certainly do not have infinite gravity. They would pull the entire universe in around them if they did. We cannot see that such particles, moving close together in the same direction, have any gravitational effect on each other, or other matter, at all. Strings of matter do not occupy all spatial dimensions, meaning that there would be no gravity in the dimensions perpendicular to the dimension along which the strings of matter are aligned. So, an object that we perceive as moving at the speed of light, which is actually perpendicular to our time dimension, actually has no weight at all from it's own point of view.
This model also helps to explain why electromagnetic waves have no mass. My theory defines space as a multi-dimensional checkerboard of alternating infinitesimal negative and positive charges. Space does not have mass, and it defines what masslessness is. Matter is defined as long strings of an electric charge. Since this is a disruption of the neutral space pattern, matter does have mass. Electromagnetic waves are also disruptions in the perfect checkerboard of background space charged particles. These waves affect the matter which has mass, but have no mass themselves due to the dimension of space lacking parallel strings of matter in which they exist.
This means that if the so-called "Steady-State" model of the universe, in which there was no Big Bang, no known beginning, and no apparent expansion or contraction were correct, there would also be no gravity, either attractive or repulsive.
Living beings, moving in the opposite time direction, could conceivably co-exist. They would perceive one another as moving backward. If they could communicate, they could tell each other what was in their future, but only for the speaker's own past and for inanimate matter outside of the creatures themselves and their influence, such as earthquakes, meteorite impacts and, supernovae.
Beings with a reverse time direction would perceive the universe as having been created in the past (our future), but in the process of coming apart by reverse gravity. Gravity would seem to be an osmotic force evening out the distribution of matter, with the osmotic force getting stronger as time progressed. A ball thrown into the air would still fall back down because the reverse gravity is not yet strong enough for it to be otherwise.
Just as gravity seems to get stronger to us as it pulls mass together, due to the increasing concentration of mass, reverse gravity would appear to get stronger as it pulls mass apart. They would perceive that there was attractive gravity that created the universe in their past (our future), but that gravity was in the process of evening out the matter in the universe in an osmotic way. The stronger the gravity, such as in the centers of stars, the more it is reversed.
We know that our apparent expansion of the universe is not due to gravity, but those with the opposite time direction would have no Big Bang in their past as a reference point, and it would appear that gravity is an osmotic force.
Instead of perceiving matter-antimatter mutual annihilation when the two are brought into contact, those in the opposite time direction would perceive spontaneous creation out of empty space, equal amounts of matter and antimatter along with the burst of energy. There would be many such "Big Bangs" instad of the single one that we, in our time direction, perceive. They would have our Big Bang far in their future. But if beings in the reverse time direction put matter and antimatter together, they would get the mutual annihilation and burst of energy.
By the way, I find that this time perspective on the relationship between matter and antimatter strongly indicates that the Big Bang was such a mutual annihilation, as I speculated in the cosmological theory.
We see at 45 degrees into the past dimension, as I described in "Why We Perceive The Speed of Light". This means that, if our direction of time flow were reversed, the groups of galaxies in the wider universe would seem to be much further apart then they do to us, although they would appear to be gradually moving closer.
In summary, gravity as we see it now is a function of time. That means that, if time turns out to only be something that we perceive and not a part of inanimate reality, gravity must also be something other than it seems to us. We are designed to move in one time direction along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains, but it would not be breaking any fundamental rules if our time flow was in the opposite direction so that the Big Bang appeared in the future, rather than in the past. But since gravity is a function of time, because it creates motion which is a function of time, it would have to be reversed if our time direction was reversed.
But how can a basic force of nature be reversed if time, which we only perceive, was reversed? None of the other forces of nature, electromagnetism or the strong nuclear force binding atomic nuclei, would be reversed.
There is one very simple, clear and, obvious explanation. If time were reversed, the apparent expansion of the universe would also be reversed. If space can be shown to behave like a fabric by the Lense-Thirring Effect (frame dragging), then the expansion of the universe on a large scale must also have some type of local effects.
Indeed it does. But whether the universe, as a whole, is contracting or expanding, the local effect is of space resisting by either being an attractive force if our time direction causes us to perceive the universe as expanding, or being a repulsive force if our time direction causes us to perceive the universe as contracting.
As I have described, the spatial direction of our time flow moves away from the Big Bang because we perceive this as the beginning of the universe. Even though it is space which separates us from the Big Bang, we perceive it as time because it lies in the direction along which our bundles of strings are aligned, and along which our consciousness moves.
I am certain that we are traveling in the "right" direction as far as time goes. After all, the Big Bang was the beginning of the universe and it seems logical that our direction of time flow in space should be away from it.
But even so, it wouldn't be breaking any basic rules if our experience of time flowed in the opposite direction, toward the Big Bang, since time is really a dimension of space. But what would it look like to us if this opposite time direction were the case? What would the basic laws of physics be like to us?
To begin with, since what we perceive as time is actually a dimension of space, if it were reversed then the other spatial directions would have to be reversed also. North would be what was south, and east would be what was west.
The significant thing about this thought experiment of having our time flow in the opposite direction along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains is what it reveals about gravity. As it is now, we see objects apart but waiting to be pulled together by gravity. If time were reversed, we would see objects together but waiting to fall apart.
The point of this is that gravity is actually a function of time. It is true that gravity is an attractive force as long as time moves forward. However, I think that I have shown beyond any doubt that time is anything but absolute. It is only something that we perceive as our consciousness moves along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light. Since gravity must be a function of time, because gravity creates motion and motion is a function of time, the revelation that time does not really exist, but is only the way that we perceive a dimension of space, forces us to redefine gravity.
It is important to understand that to grasp this concept, we must eliminate from our minds all of the "new motion" that comes from living things. This includes anything constructed by, or altered by, living things. Nothing in inanimate reality is really in motion, or has been in motion since it was thrown out across space by the Big Bang. But living things came along with the ability to move things and make changes to the environment, this is referred to as "new motion".
I explained that while the principle of entropy is often cited as proof that time can never be reversed, this is really not the case because all meaningful examples of entropy involve either living things or things made by living things. One example is the bottle of ink placed in an aquarium filled with water, the ink flows out of the bottle and mixes with the water much more easily than it flows back into the bottle. But this involves items made by and altered by living things (us), it only shows that our time direction is not reversible. It does not apply to inanimate matter.
The point of this concept is that the universe is neutral with respect to gravity, whether it is an attractive or a repulsive force depends on which time direction that we move in. Living things are designed to move in one time direction only. If we were to reverse time as I am describing here, we would not have people walking backward.
Moving in our time direction away from the Big Bang, we see the gravity of a star's mass crunching together smaller atoms into larger ones. If we moved in the opposite time direction, we would see larger atoms being pulled apart by gravity into smaller ones.
If the flow of time were reversed, nuclear fusion would be replaced by fission. In the present time direction, we perceive the extreme gravity in centers of stars overpowering the electron repulsion of electromagnetism to crunch small atoms together into larger ones. If time were reversed, we would perceive the gravity in centers of stars as overpowering the strong nuclear force in pulling large atoms apart into smaller ones.
The nuclear binding energy curve, of the binding energy holding nuclei together, would be inverted. Stars would seem to generate energy by fission, rather than fusion, but the fission would result from reversed gravity, and not from neutrons colliding with the nucleus. Instead of smaller atoms being crunched together, and releasing excess binding energy when they combine to form a larger atom, it would be inverted in that the energy would appear to be released when the larger atom is pulled apart by reverse gravity. Since gravity works with the strong nuclear force to fuse atoms, if gravity were inverted the binding energy curve would also be inverted.
In the opposite time direction, gravity would work against the strong nuclear force, which binds atomic nuclei against the electromagnetic repulsion of like-charged protons. The creation of elements from one another involves a competition between the basic forces of nature. In our present time direction, gravity in the center of a star works against the electromagnetic repulsion that keeps atoms separate by the like charges of the electrons in neighboring atoms.
Thus, electromagnetism dominates until the sheer mass of the star allows gravity to overwhelm it. If time were reversed, we would perceive the balance of forces as having shifted. Gravity would now be working against the strong nuclear force, which binds atomic nuclei together, rather than against electromagnetism. There would still be the competition between the strong nuclear force and electromagnetism, concerning the formation of elements from one another, but gravity would have changed sides.
The electromagnetic force and the nuclear forces would not be changed if our time flow was in the opposite direction. Like charges would still repel, and opposite charges would still attract. Negative would still be negative, and a positive charge would still be positive. The strong nuclear force would still provide the binding energy to hold the like-charged protons together against electromagnetic repulsion in the nucleus. It is only gravity that would be different.
Picture space as something like a rubber sheet, and this makes perfect sense considering the well-proven Lense-Thirring Effect described by Einstein, otherwise known as "frame-dragging". The simplest way of proving that space actually behaves like a fabric is that a satellite in orbit around the earth will have it's position gradually shifted by the rotation of the earth because this rotation pulls the sorrounding space with it, to some degree. My cosmological theory describes space as infinitesimal alternating negative and positive charges in multiple dimensions, so it makes sense that it can be "pulled" to a certain extent.
My conclusion is that if the rotation of a planet can have an effect on space by "pulling" it along with the rotation, what about the expansion of the entire universe? This expansion has got to have some local effects that we can observe or measure. Whether the universe, as a whole, is expanding or contracting depends, of course, on which way our time direction is flowing.
When we move away from the Big Bang in time, as we do, we perceive the universe as expanding but gravity as an attractive force, pulling matter together, on a local scale. The local effect opposes the state of the universe as a whole. this is rather like pulling a rubber band so that it expands, and the band tries to counteract this by contracting.
If our time direction was toward the Big Bang, we would perceive just the opposite. The universe would seem to be contracting, as a whole, but gravity would be counteracting this by acting as a repulsive force. This would be like squeezing a rubber ball so that the ball tries to counteract by pushing outward.
This scenario does imply that gravity must be getting stronger, from our point of view, as we move along in our present time flow direction. Although this occurs much too slowly for us to perceive. This strengthening is because the space in the material universe is becoming more stretched by it's expansion, and it tries to resist this stretching. If we were moving in the opposite time direction, gravity would be getting weaker while the universe was contracting, until it could not hold matter together at all.
Gravity would actually be more complex than simple attraction or repulsion, because of the apparent expansion or contraction of the universe, according to our direction of time flow. In the opposite time direction, gravity would seem to be a repulsive force on a local scale, but an attractive force in the universe as a whole, because the universe would appear to be contracting.
This means that we could describe gravity in terms of osmosis. This is a chemical and biological principle that apparently has nothing to do with gravity, but provides an excellent analogy. In a simple example of osmosis, if salt is concentrated in a certain portion of a volume of water, osmosis will tend to move water into the concentration until the salt is evenly distributed in the water.
In the opposite time direction gravity would be an osmotic force, trying to even the distribution of matter in space by repulsion at the local level and attraction in the universe as a whole. In our present time direction, away from the Big Bang, gravity can be described as a clumping force, or anti-osmotic. It pulls matter together locally, even as the universe expands as a whole. The "clumps" of matter held together by gravity would be groups of galaxies.
What about the time dimension of space? I mean the dimension of space along which the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains are aligned. This is the dimension going toward and away from the Big Bang. The universe is neither expanding nor contracting in that dimension. Therefore, according to this theory, there should be no gravity in that dimension.
But what about cosmic rays? These rays, which are not really rays but particles of matter, bombard us from all directions in space, and move at, or close to, the speed of light. Now according to Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity, a body moving at the speed of light should have infinite mass. Since gravity is proprtional to mass, it should also have infinite gravity. This should be true even for a sub-atomic particle. These cosmic ray particles are particles with mass, not massless neutrinos.
By the way, I discussed this in depth in the posting "Cosmic Rays And Relativity" and how it proves that my cosmological model must be correct.
Obviously, the particles comprising cosmic rays certainly do not have infinite gravity. They would pull the entire universe in around them if they did. We cannot see that such particles, moving close together in the same direction, have any gravitational effect on each other, or other matter, at all. Strings of matter do not occupy all spatial dimensions, meaning that there would be no gravity in the dimensions perpendicular to the dimension along which the strings of matter are aligned. So, an object that we perceive as moving at the speed of light, which is actually perpendicular to our time dimension, actually has no weight at all from it's own point of view.
This model also helps to explain why electromagnetic waves have no mass. My theory defines space as a multi-dimensional checkerboard of alternating infinitesimal negative and positive charges. Space does not have mass, and it defines what masslessness is. Matter is defined as long strings of an electric charge. Since this is a disruption of the neutral space pattern, matter does have mass. Electromagnetic waves are also disruptions in the perfect checkerboard of background space charged particles. These waves affect the matter which has mass, but have no mass themselves due to the dimension of space lacking parallel strings of matter in which they exist.
This means that if the so-called "Steady-State" model of the universe, in which there was no Big Bang, no known beginning, and no apparent expansion or contraction were correct, there would also be no gravity, either attractive or repulsive.
Living beings, moving in the opposite time direction, could conceivably co-exist. They would perceive one another as moving backward. If they could communicate, they could tell each other what was in their future, but only for the speaker's own past and for inanimate matter outside of the creatures themselves and their influence, such as earthquakes, meteorite impacts and, supernovae.
Beings with a reverse time direction would perceive the universe as having been created in the past (our future), but in the process of coming apart by reverse gravity. Gravity would seem to be an osmotic force evening out the distribution of matter, with the osmotic force getting stronger as time progressed. A ball thrown into the air would still fall back down because the reverse gravity is not yet strong enough for it to be otherwise.
Just as gravity seems to get stronger to us as it pulls mass together, due to the increasing concentration of mass, reverse gravity would appear to get stronger as it pulls mass apart. They would perceive that there was attractive gravity that created the universe in their past (our future), but that gravity was in the process of evening out the matter in the universe in an osmotic way. The stronger the gravity, such as in the centers of stars, the more it is reversed.
We know that our apparent expansion of the universe is not due to gravity, but those with the opposite time direction would have no Big Bang in their past as a reference point, and it would appear that gravity is an osmotic force.
Instead of perceiving matter-antimatter mutual annihilation when the two are brought into contact, those in the opposite time direction would perceive spontaneous creation out of empty space, equal amounts of matter and antimatter along with the burst of energy. There would be many such "Big Bangs" instad of the single one that we, in our time direction, perceive. They would have our Big Bang far in their future. But if beings in the reverse time direction put matter and antimatter together, they would get the mutual annihilation and burst of energy.
By the way, I find that this time perspective on the relationship between matter and antimatter strongly indicates that the Big Bang was such a mutual annihilation, as I speculated in the cosmological theory.
We see at 45 degrees into the past dimension, as I described in "Why We Perceive The Speed of Light". This means that, if our direction of time flow were reversed, the groups of galaxies in the wider universe would seem to be much further apart then they do to us, although they would appear to be gradually moving closer.
In summary, gravity as we see it now is a function of time. That means that, if time turns out to only be something that we perceive and not a part of inanimate reality, gravity must also be something other than it seems to us. We are designed to move in one time direction along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains, but it would not be breaking any fundamental rules if our time flow was in the opposite direction so that the Big Bang appeared in the future, rather than in the past. But since gravity is a function of time, because it creates motion which is a function of time, it would have to be reversed if our time direction was reversed.
But how can a basic force of nature be reversed if time, which we only perceive, was reversed? None of the other forces of nature, electromagnetism or the strong nuclear force binding atomic nuclei, would be reversed.
There is one very simple, clear and, obvious explanation. If time were reversed, the apparent expansion of the universe would also be reversed. If space can be shown to behave like a fabric by the Lense-Thirring Effect (frame dragging), then the expansion of the universe on a large scale must also have some type of local effects.
Indeed it does. But whether the universe, as a whole, is contracting or expanding, the local effect is of space resisting by either being an attractive force if our time direction causes us to perceive the universe as expanding, or being a repulsive force if our time direction causes us to perceive the universe as contracting.
Black Holes And Antimatter
There was recently an article in the news about black holes. A black hole is an extremely concentrated mass, bound by it's tremendous gravity. The gravity of a black hole is so intense that nothing can ever escape it, supposedly not even light. Hence the name.
There is believed to be a massive black hole at the center of our galaxy. In recent years, black holes have become a staple of space science.
But yet, it has been found that black holes actually do decay over time, and also emit radiation. This decay can only mean that matter is somehow leaving the black hole. How can we account for this?
As it turns out, my cosmological theory offers a relatively simple explanation for why black holes decay over time. In the posting, "The Beginning Of The Universe", I explained how charge migration took place in the original two-dimensional sheet of space, before the bonds disintegrated in one of it's two dimensions leaving us with the one-dimensional strings thrown out across the universe that we today know as matter.
In this primeval charge migration, one side of the sheet became the negative side, and the other the positive side. The negative side formed electrons when one of the two dimensional bonds disintegrated, and the positive side formed positrons which are the antimatter equivalent of electrons.
This charge migration took place because the universe seeks the condition of lowest tension, since this is also the lowest energy state. This seeking of the lowest energy state is the reason that a ball will fall to the ground when you drop it, it takes less energy for it to fall that it does to oppose gravity to keep it in the air.
There is tension in space between the checkerboard of alternating infinitesimal negative and positive charges that compose space. But charge migration, to bring about a state of lower tension, does not take place because there are so many dimensions of space. It was much easier for it to take place in the original sheet of space because there were only two dimensions.
Black holes are unlike anything else in the universe. The movement of matter is governed by electromagnetism. The electron repulsion of the negatively-charged electrons in the outer shells of atoms is what causes matter to move when force is exerted on it by other matter. This same electron repulsion is what prevents objects on the surface of the earth from falling to the earth's center of gravity. Atoms are almost entirely empty space, but the electrons in the outer shells of the atoms composing the earth and the atoms in the outer shells of objects on the earth's surface repel one another, this is because like charges repel and all electrons are negatively-charged.
When matter is brought together, the electric charges do not move at all. Negative remain negative, and positive remains positive. It is matter which moves to accommodate these electromagnetic forces.
But the inside of a black hole is completely different from anything else in the universe. Not even the centers of stars, where smaller atoms are crushed together into larger atoms, are remotely like the gravitational stress that matter undergoes in a black hole. At least atoms can move in the centers of stars, so that they can be combined together.
If matter is subject to extreme stresses, unlike anything else in the universe, meaning that like charges are being forced together by the unfathomable gravity. And if it is possible for charges to actually migrate within matter in a way similar to the original sheet of space, which became what we know as matter, as described in "The Beginning Of The Universe", why couldn't charges within black holes simply migrate to relieve the extreme stresses?
My cosmological theory explains how the nature of the universe first seeks charge balance, and secondly seeks the lowest energy level. This is explained in the posting "Gamma Ray Bursts". The universe could drastically lower it's energy level by minimizing the forces working against each other inside a black hole by simply having negative and positive charges rearrange themselves.
Since the matter itself cannot possibly move, this would involve the negative and positive charges trading places. As long as the overall charge balance of the universe remains zero, this would not be breaking any fundamental rules.
But then, if we have charges moving within matter, this means that matter will sometimes be changing into antimatter. We know that when matter and antimatter are brought together, they mutually annihilate one another in a burst of energy. Both space and matter, as well as antimatter, are composed of negative and positive electric charges. When matter and antimatter are brought together, they mutually annihilate as they rearrange their charge arrangement back into that of space. The energy that was holding their bonds together is released.
So, there we have it. This simple scenario explains both why black holes eventually decay, and why they release energy. Decay would seem impossible with the gravity so extreme that no matter can possibly escape. But the matter isn't actually escaping the black hole into space, it is mutually annihilating as matter and antimatter.
One complication that is pointed out about the decay of Black Holes, and the corresponding release of radiation, is the so-called "information paradox". If a star condensed by gravity to ultimately form a black hole, and there must have been information in that star concerning it's structure and the structures of it's atoms, then what happened to that information when the black hole decays? We know that information can never disappear altogether.
But my way of explaining it here leaves no such missing information. The black hole contained all of the information that was in the star. The decay of a black hole, until nothing remains but empty space, is a kind of a long and slow matter-antimatter mutual annihilation of matter. But just as all of the information that was in the matter and antimatter is not lost, but is contained in the burst of energy that is released by the reaction, so the radiation that is released by the slow decay of the black hole also contains all of the information that was in the matter of the black hole, and the star before it. This radiation released by a decaying black hole is sometimes referred to as "Hawking Radiation".
My theory is that energy and information is really the same thing. We cannot apply energy to something without also adding information to it, and we cannot add information to something without applying energy to it. Not only is all of the information that was in the black hole and the star before it included in the radiation that escapes a black hole, all of the energy that was in the atoms of the matter of the star and black hole escapes too.
Remember that space is an alternating pattern of negative and positive charges in multiple dimensions. Energy ultimately opposes the rules of the basic charges, that opposite charges attract and like charges repel. Energy makes it possible to overcome the repulsion between like charges so that matter can be brought into being. The original infinitesimal electric charges still exist but negative charges can be cobbled together to form electrons and positive charges to form protons. But this joining together of like charges involves both energy and information, which is actually the same thing.
By the way, this also neatly explains what gravity is. Not only are the sum of negative and positive charges in the universe equal, the two basic rules about the attraction of opposite charges and repulsion of like charges is also equal. Energy overcomes the repulsion of opposite charges, so that matter which is a concentration of charges can exist. But this leaves an imbalance between the two basic rules of electric charges, so that the attractive force is more prevalent than the repulsive force. This leaves us with the net attractive force between matter that we refer to as gravity.
When a matter-antimatter mutual annihilation takes place, or when a black hole decays, the radiation that is released contains all of the energy and information that the matter had contained. The energy and information radiates away into space, and no information is lost.
Remember that, in this cosmological theory, electromagnetic radiation is a displacement in the pattern of alternating negative and positive electric charges that composes space. This pattern of displacement radiates out across space as a wave which reflects the nature of the information which produced it. This is what energy does in matter, it displaces the usual alternating pattern of negative and positive electric charges so that charged particles (actually strings) such as nucleons and electrons can be cobbled together from like charges.
After the mutual annihilation of matter and antimatter, or as a black hole decays, the displacement of electric charges due to energy remains exactly the same, except that now it is dispersed across a wide area of space instead of concentrated in matter. The matter, antimatter and, black hole seem to disappear, but no energy or information at all is lost.
I can think of no better, or indeed any other, explanation of how a black hole could decay.
Remember that in physics, there is an age-old principle known as "Occam's Razor" which stipulates that the simplest explanation for something us usually the best explanation. This may not be true when dealing with people, but it does seem to be the case with physics. This shows from yet another perspective how this model of the universe must be correct.
THE MATTER CYCLE
There is a close relationship between the quantum level and the astronomical levels of reality that I have never before seen pointed out, and which provides more proof of my cosmological theory that both space and matter are composed of infinitesimal electric charges, that space is an alternating checkerboard of these charges and that matter is a concentration of the charges other than the checkerboard pattern of space.
I also have a physics and astronomy blog. The difference between cosmology and ordinary physics and astronomy is that if a concept can be explained without involving the additional dimensions of space in my cosmology theory that we cannot see or the composition of space and matter as the fundamental negative and positive electric charges, then it gets classified as ordinary physics or astronomy.
Have you ever questioned why books tend to depict neutrons and protons, in the nucleus of atoms, as neat little spheres? Planets and stars are spherical in form, but that is due to gravity creating a form with the lowest energy state. There is no such force at the level of the atomic nucleus that would dictate that protons and neutrons had to be spherical.
I find that, if we can get away from thinking of nucleons, as protons and neutrons are referred to, as spherical in form, it helps to explain the binding energy that holds the nucleus together. Nucleons are actually made of mixed charges, composed of smaller particles called quarks. An up quark has a charge of + 2/3, and a down quark has a charge of - 1/3. Two up quarks and a down quark have a net charge of + 1, and forms a proton. Two down quarks and one up quark has a neutral charge, and forms a neutron.
In my theory of binding energy, when smaller atoms in stars are crunched together in the center of the star to form larger atoms, the kinetic energy of the gravitational mass of the star applies pressure on the nucleons so that the mixed negative and positive charges are displaced so that they face off, and so the nucleus can hold together. I described this in "The Nature Of Binding Energy", on the physics and astronomy blog, www.markmeekphysics.blogspot.com .
Remember that at the nuclear scale, there is really no such thing as energy inefficiency. All energy has to be applied in some way so that it makes changes. An engine has a degree of inefficiency because force and heat is dissipated into the surrounding atoms. But at the nuclear level, there is nowhere to dissipate it to.
There is a force within each nucleon which holds it's component quarks together, the force is sometimes referred to as gluons. In the nucleus, the nucleons remain intact and do not merge together. This is because the force holding the quarks of the nucleons together is stronger than that holding the nucleus together.
If we compare the astronomical and quantum levels, we see that each change in quantum structure due to gravity corresponds to a different astronomical body, which is the venue for changes due to gravitational pressure.
Remember that, in my cosmological theory, matter originates from a sheet of space that was not joined by it's structure of alternating electric charges to the multi-dimensional background space. The sheet was thus folded relative to the background space and the negative side came in contact with the positive side, causing one dimension of it to disintegrate in the matter-antimatter mutual annihilation, that we perceive as the Big Bang. The remaining one-dimensional strings form what we perceive as matter.
We could depict what we might call the Matter Cycle as three steps in each direction, first the formation of matter and then atoms from empty space and then it's destruction back into space. I have never before seen this pointed out. The Matter Cycle could be illustrated as follows:
SPACE > QUARKS > NUCLEONS > ATOMS .....GRAVITY
SPACE < BLACK HOLES < NEUTRON STARS < STARS
We could say that gravity came into being at the Big Bang to oppose the Big Bang. It does this not only by trying to pull matter back together, but also by trying to break matter back down into space. Gravity is a property of matter in space and if enough matter is brought together, gravity will break it back down into the space from whence it came.
After the Big Bang, quarks joined together to form nucleons and then electrons, with an opposite electric charge, were added to form an atom with an overall neutral charge. My description of the Big Bang, involving this sheet of space, is based on there being equal numbers of negative and positive charges. Yet it also seems to indicate that quarks overall have more of a positive than a negative charge, since up quarks have a charge of + 2/3 and down quarks of - 1/3. But we must remember that the Big Bang produced both matter and antimatter, where the charges are reversed so that it all balances out.
(Note- One thing that caught my attention when formulating this theory is how the structure of matter seems to revolve around thirds. Quarks forming protons and neutrons are based on thirds and a proton has 1,836 times the mass of an electron, which is a number that is divisible by 3 multiple times).
After atoms have formed, and enough are brought together by gravity, smaller atoms are crunched together into larger atoms by the pressure in the centers of stars. The formation of atoms by the nuclear binding energy force and by electromagnetism is the peak of the creation part of the cycle. The crunching together into larger atoms by the gravity of stars is the beginning of the destruction part of the cycle.
The life cycle of stars eventually end, with many of the atoms thrown out across space by the explosions of a nova or supernova. If the mass of a star is less then what is known as the Chandrasekhar Limit, for the Indian physicist of that name, it will end up as what is known as a white dwarf star. This limit is 1.4 times the mass of our sun. In such a star, the structure of the component atoms are still intact. The white dwarf does not have enough gravitational pressure to break down the very structures of atoms.
But if the mass of the former star was above the Chandrasekhar Limit, it will form what is known as a neutron star. In a neutron star, the structures of the atoms are broken down by the tremendous pressure of gravity. Electrons in atomic orbitals are crunched into protons, by what is known as electron capture, to form neutrons. This means that, in a neutron star, the structures of atoms are broken down but the structures of the component nucleons are not. A neutron star, although technically not a star, is a mass of neutrons held together by their tremendous gravity into a compact and extremely dense body.
Just as atoms correspond to stars on opposite sides of the matter cycle, with atoms on the quantum or creation side and stars on the gravitational or destruction side, nucleons correspond to neutron stars.
The most massive stars collapse into black holes. In a black hole, unlike a neutron star, even the structure of the nucleons has been broken down by the tremendous gravity. If this is the case, and neutrons are composed of quarks, then black holes must correspond to quarks and must be composed of the quarks which had earlier composed the nucleons which had been broken down. This is one step away from empty space on the gravitational-destruction side of the matter cycle, just as quarks are one step away from empty space on the quantum-creation side of the matter cycle.
A black hole must break down the structure of nucleons into quarks or else there would be no difference between a neutron star and a black hole. It has been postulated that there might be "quark stars" which exist, and which are a step beyond neutron stars in that the nucleons have been broken down into quarks. No such stars have yet been found, but this model indicates that black holes actually are quark stars.
A black hole is the densest possible concentration of matter yet it is also the final step in the matter cycle, of matter returning back to empty space. The very definition of a black hole is that nothing can ever escape it's gravity, not even light or other radiation. But yet black holes do give off radiation, the so-called "Hawking Radiation". This radiation is a return of the energy of the Big Bang that went into fusing matter together from the alternating negative and positive electric charges of empty space in the first place.
This neat three-step process in each direction indicates that black holes are the transition step between quarks and the alternating electric charges of empty space. The tremendous pressure within black holes brings about charge migration to relieve the pressure of like charges being forced together. But this, in effect, creates antimatter out of matter and causes the mutual annihilation of a matter-antimatter reaction. This is what causes black holes to gradually decay and give off radiation as they do.
This happens because the quarks of which matter has been broken down into in black holes are of mixed electric charge that are in very close proximity. The gradual decay of a black hole is the component electric charges of the quarks being rearranged back into the alternating checkerboard of negative and positive charges in empty space. It is well known that black holes eventually decay, but why would the densest concentration of matter in the universe decay unless a process like this was taking place? Unlike a matter-antimatter mutual annihilation as the two are brought into contact, the decay and emitting of radiation of a black hole is slow because the process is very gradual.
In summary, all of this matter cycle takes place because a two-dimensional sheet of space formed in which the alternating pattern of infinitesimal negative and positive charges was not aligned with the pattern in the surrounding background space and this is what is required to get the two aligned. Unlike the quantum-creation side of the cycle, the gravitational-destruction side is scalar rather than sequential. A black hole only comes into being if there is enough gravitational mass brought together. A neutron star does not automatically develop into a black hole, without more mass somehow being added.
For another perspective on the relationship between the atomic and astronomical levels of reality, see "The Chemical-Nuclear-Astronomical Relationship" on the physics and astronomy blog, www.markmeekphysics.blogspot.com .
There is believed to be a massive black hole at the center of our galaxy. In recent years, black holes have become a staple of space science.
But yet, it has been found that black holes actually do decay over time, and also emit radiation. This decay can only mean that matter is somehow leaving the black hole. How can we account for this?
As it turns out, my cosmological theory offers a relatively simple explanation for why black holes decay over time. In the posting, "The Beginning Of The Universe", I explained how charge migration took place in the original two-dimensional sheet of space, before the bonds disintegrated in one of it's two dimensions leaving us with the one-dimensional strings thrown out across the universe that we today know as matter.
In this primeval charge migration, one side of the sheet became the negative side, and the other the positive side. The negative side formed electrons when one of the two dimensional bonds disintegrated, and the positive side formed positrons which are the antimatter equivalent of electrons.
This charge migration took place because the universe seeks the condition of lowest tension, since this is also the lowest energy state. This seeking of the lowest energy state is the reason that a ball will fall to the ground when you drop it, it takes less energy for it to fall that it does to oppose gravity to keep it in the air.
There is tension in space between the checkerboard of alternating infinitesimal negative and positive charges that compose space. But charge migration, to bring about a state of lower tension, does not take place because there are so many dimensions of space. It was much easier for it to take place in the original sheet of space because there were only two dimensions.
Black holes are unlike anything else in the universe. The movement of matter is governed by electromagnetism. The electron repulsion of the negatively-charged electrons in the outer shells of atoms is what causes matter to move when force is exerted on it by other matter. This same electron repulsion is what prevents objects on the surface of the earth from falling to the earth's center of gravity. Atoms are almost entirely empty space, but the electrons in the outer shells of the atoms composing the earth and the atoms in the outer shells of objects on the earth's surface repel one another, this is because like charges repel and all electrons are negatively-charged.
When matter is brought together, the electric charges do not move at all. Negative remain negative, and positive remains positive. It is matter which moves to accommodate these electromagnetic forces.
But the inside of a black hole is completely different from anything else in the universe. Not even the centers of stars, where smaller atoms are crushed together into larger atoms, are remotely like the gravitational stress that matter undergoes in a black hole. At least atoms can move in the centers of stars, so that they can be combined together.
If matter is subject to extreme stresses, unlike anything else in the universe, meaning that like charges are being forced together by the unfathomable gravity. And if it is possible for charges to actually migrate within matter in a way similar to the original sheet of space, which became what we know as matter, as described in "The Beginning Of The Universe", why couldn't charges within black holes simply migrate to relieve the extreme stresses?
My cosmological theory explains how the nature of the universe first seeks charge balance, and secondly seeks the lowest energy level. This is explained in the posting "Gamma Ray Bursts". The universe could drastically lower it's energy level by minimizing the forces working against each other inside a black hole by simply having negative and positive charges rearrange themselves.
Since the matter itself cannot possibly move, this would involve the negative and positive charges trading places. As long as the overall charge balance of the universe remains zero, this would not be breaking any fundamental rules.
But then, if we have charges moving within matter, this means that matter will sometimes be changing into antimatter. We know that when matter and antimatter are brought together, they mutually annihilate one another in a burst of energy. Both space and matter, as well as antimatter, are composed of negative and positive electric charges. When matter and antimatter are brought together, they mutually annihilate as they rearrange their charge arrangement back into that of space. The energy that was holding their bonds together is released.
So, there we have it. This simple scenario explains both why black holes eventually decay, and why they release energy. Decay would seem impossible with the gravity so extreme that no matter can possibly escape. But the matter isn't actually escaping the black hole into space, it is mutually annihilating as matter and antimatter.
One complication that is pointed out about the decay of Black Holes, and the corresponding release of radiation, is the so-called "information paradox". If a star condensed by gravity to ultimately form a black hole, and there must have been information in that star concerning it's structure and the structures of it's atoms, then what happened to that information when the black hole decays? We know that information can never disappear altogether.
But my way of explaining it here leaves no such missing information. The black hole contained all of the information that was in the star. The decay of a black hole, until nothing remains but empty space, is a kind of a long and slow matter-antimatter mutual annihilation of matter. But just as all of the information that was in the matter and antimatter is not lost, but is contained in the burst of energy that is released by the reaction, so the radiation that is released by the slow decay of the black hole also contains all of the information that was in the matter of the black hole, and the star before it. This radiation released by a decaying black hole is sometimes referred to as "Hawking Radiation".
My theory is that energy and information is really the same thing. We cannot apply energy to something without also adding information to it, and we cannot add information to something without applying energy to it. Not only is all of the information that was in the black hole and the star before it included in the radiation that escapes a black hole, all of the energy that was in the atoms of the matter of the star and black hole escapes too.
Remember that space is an alternating pattern of negative and positive charges in multiple dimensions. Energy ultimately opposes the rules of the basic charges, that opposite charges attract and like charges repel. Energy makes it possible to overcome the repulsion between like charges so that matter can be brought into being. The original infinitesimal electric charges still exist but negative charges can be cobbled together to form electrons and positive charges to form protons. But this joining together of like charges involves both energy and information, which is actually the same thing.
By the way, this also neatly explains what gravity is. Not only are the sum of negative and positive charges in the universe equal, the two basic rules about the attraction of opposite charges and repulsion of like charges is also equal. Energy overcomes the repulsion of opposite charges, so that matter which is a concentration of charges can exist. But this leaves an imbalance between the two basic rules of electric charges, so that the attractive force is more prevalent than the repulsive force. This leaves us with the net attractive force between matter that we refer to as gravity.
When a matter-antimatter mutual annihilation takes place, or when a black hole decays, the radiation that is released contains all of the energy and information that the matter had contained. The energy and information radiates away into space, and no information is lost.
Remember that, in this cosmological theory, electromagnetic radiation is a displacement in the pattern of alternating negative and positive electric charges that composes space. This pattern of displacement radiates out across space as a wave which reflects the nature of the information which produced it. This is what energy does in matter, it displaces the usual alternating pattern of negative and positive electric charges so that charged particles (actually strings) such as nucleons and electrons can be cobbled together from like charges.
After the mutual annihilation of matter and antimatter, or as a black hole decays, the displacement of electric charges due to energy remains exactly the same, except that now it is dispersed across a wide area of space instead of concentrated in matter. The matter, antimatter and, black hole seem to disappear, but no energy or information at all is lost.
I can think of no better, or indeed any other, explanation of how a black hole could decay.
Remember that in physics, there is an age-old principle known as "Occam's Razor" which stipulates that the simplest explanation for something us usually the best explanation. This may not be true when dealing with people, but it does seem to be the case with physics. This shows from yet another perspective how this model of the universe must be correct.
THE MATTER CYCLE
There is a close relationship between the quantum level and the astronomical levels of reality that I have never before seen pointed out, and which provides more proof of my cosmological theory that both space and matter are composed of infinitesimal electric charges, that space is an alternating checkerboard of these charges and that matter is a concentration of the charges other than the checkerboard pattern of space.
I also have a physics and astronomy blog. The difference between cosmology and ordinary physics and astronomy is that if a concept can be explained without involving the additional dimensions of space in my cosmology theory that we cannot see or the composition of space and matter as the fundamental negative and positive electric charges, then it gets classified as ordinary physics or astronomy.
Have you ever questioned why books tend to depict neutrons and protons, in the nucleus of atoms, as neat little spheres? Planets and stars are spherical in form, but that is due to gravity creating a form with the lowest energy state. There is no such force at the level of the atomic nucleus that would dictate that protons and neutrons had to be spherical.
I find that, if we can get away from thinking of nucleons, as protons and neutrons are referred to, as spherical in form, it helps to explain the binding energy that holds the nucleus together. Nucleons are actually made of mixed charges, composed of smaller particles called quarks. An up quark has a charge of + 2/3, and a down quark has a charge of - 1/3. Two up quarks and a down quark have a net charge of + 1, and forms a proton. Two down quarks and one up quark has a neutral charge, and forms a neutron.
In my theory of binding energy, when smaller atoms in stars are crunched together in the center of the star to form larger atoms, the kinetic energy of the gravitational mass of the star applies pressure on the nucleons so that the mixed negative and positive charges are displaced so that they face off, and so the nucleus can hold together. I described this in "The Nature Of Binding Energy", on the physics and astronomy blog, www.markmeekphysics.blogspot.com .
Remember that at the nuclear scale, there is really no such thing as energy inefficiency. All energy has to be applied in some way so that it makes changes. An engine has a degree of inefficiency because force and heat is dissipated into the surrounding atoms. But at the nuclear level, there is nowhere to dissipate it to.
There is a force within each nucleon which holds it's component quarks together, the force is sometimes referred to as gluons. In the nucleus, the nucleons remain intact and do not merge together. This is because the force holding the quarks of the nucleons together is stronger than that holding the nucleus together.
If we compare the astronomical and quantum levels, we see that each change in quantum structure due to gravity corresponds to a different astronomical body, which is the venue for changes due to gravitational pressure.
Remember that, in my cosmological theory, matter originates from a sheet of space that was not joined by it's structure of alternating electric charges to the multi-dimensional background space. The sheet was thus folded relative to the background space and the negative side came in contact with the positive side, causing one dimension of it to disintegrate in the matter-antimatter mutual annihilation, that we perceive as the Big Bang. The remaining one-dimensional strings form what we perceive as matter.
We could depict what we might call the Matter Cycle as three steps in each direction, first the formation of matter and then atoms from empty space and then it's destruction back into space. I have never before seen this pointed out. The Matter Cycle could be illustrated as follows:
SPACE > QUARKS > NUCLEONS > ATOMS .....GRAVITY
SPACE < BLACK HOLES < NEUTRON STARS < STARS
We could say that gravity came into being at the Big Bang to oppose the Big Bang. It does this not only by trying to pull matter back together, but also by trying to break matter back down into space. Gravity is a property of matter in space and if enough matter is brought together, gravity will break it back down into the space from whence it came.
After the Big Bang, quarks joined together to form nucleons and then electrons, with an opposite electric charge, were added to form an atom with an overall neutral charge. My description of the Big Bang, involving this sheet of space, is based on there being equal numbers of negative and positive charges. Yet it also seems to indicate that quarks overall have more of a positive than a negative charge, since up quarks have a charge of + 2/3 and down quarks of - 1/3. But we must remember that the Big Bang produced both matter and antimatter, where the charges are reversed so that it all balances out.
(Note- One thing that caught my attention when formulating this theory is how the structure of matter seems to revolve around thirds. Quarks forming protons and neutrons are based on thirds and a proton has 1,836 times the mass of an electron, which is a number that is divisible by 3 multiple times).
After atoms have formed, and enough are brought together by gravity, smaller atoms are crunched together into larger atoms by the pressure in the centers of stars. The formation of atoms by the nuclear binding energy force and by electromagnetism is the peak of the creation part of the cycle. The crunching together into larger atoms by the gravity of stars is the beginning of the destruction part of the cycle.
The life cycle of stars eventually end, with many of the atoms thrown out across space by the explosions of a nova or supernova. If the mass of a star is less then what is known as the Chandrasekhar Limit, for the Indian physicist of that name, it will end up as what is known as a white dwarf star. This limit is 1.4 times the mass of our sun. In such a star, the structure of the component atoms are still intact. The white dwarf does not have enough gravitational pressure to break down the very structures of atoms.
But if the mass of the former star was above the Chandrasekhar Limit, it will form what is known as a neutron star. In a neutron star, the structures of the atoms are broken down by the tremendous pressure of gravity. Electrons in atomic orbitals are crunched into protons, by what is known as electron capture, to form neutrons. This means that, in a neutron star, the structures of atoms are broken down but the structures of the component nucleons are not. A neutron star, although technically not a star, is a mass of neutrons held together by their tremendous gravity into a compact and extremely dense body.
Just as atoms correspond to stars on opposite sides of the matter cycle, with atoms on the quantum or creation side and stars on the gravitational or destruction side, nucleons correspond to neutron stars.
The most massive stars collapse into black holes. In a black hole, unlike a neutron star, even the structure of the nucleons has been broken down by the tremendous gravity. If this is the case, and neutrons are composed of quarks, then black holes must correspond to quarks and must be composed of the quarks which had earlier composed the nucleons which had been broken down. This is one step away from empty space on the gravitational-destruction side of the matter cycle, just as quarks are one step away from empty space on the quantum-creation side of the matter cycle.
A black hole must break down the structure of nucleons into quarks or else there would be no difference between a neutron star and a black hole. It has been postulated that there might be "quark stars" which exist, and which are a step beyond neutron stars in that the nucleons have been broken down into quarks. No such stars have yet been found, but this model indicates that black holes actually are quark stars.
A black hole is the densest possible concentration of matter yet it is also the final step in the matter cycle, of matter returning back to empty space. The very definition of a black hole is that nothing can ever escape it's gravity, not even light or other radiation. But yet black holes do give off radiation, the so-called "Hawking Radiation". This radiation is a return of the energy of the Big Bang that went into fusing matter together from the alternating negative and positive electric charges of empty space in the first place.
This neat three-step process in each direction indicates that black holes are the transition step between quarks and the alternating electric charges of empty space. The tremendous pressure within black holes brings about charge migration to relieve the pressure of like charges being forced together. But this, in effect, creates antimatter out of matter and causes the mutual annihilation of a matter-antimatter reaction. This is what causes black holes to gradually decay and give off radiation as they do.
This happens because the quarks of which matter has been broken down into in black holes are of mixed electric charge that are in very close proximity. The gradual decay of a black hole is the component electric charges of the quarks being rearranged back into the alternating checkerboard of negative and positive charges in empty space. It is well known that black holes eventually decay, but why would the densest concentration of matter in the universe decay unless a process like this was taking place? Unlike a matter-antimatter mutual annihilation as the two are brought into contact, the decay and emitting of radiation of a black hole is slow because the process is very gradual.
In summary, all of this matter cycle takes place because a two-dimensional sheet of space formed in which the alternating pattern of infinitesimal negative and positive charges was not aligned with the pattern in the surrounding background space and this is what is required to get the two aligned. Unlike the quantum-creation side of the cycle, the gravitational-destruction side is scalar rather than sequential. A black hole only comes into being if there is enough gravitational mass brought together. A neutron star does not automatically develop into a black hole, without more mass somehow being added.
For another perspective on the relationship between the atomic and astronomical levels of reality, see "The Chemical-Nuclear-Astronomical Relationship" on the physics and astronomy blog, www.markmeekphysics.blogspot.com .
Momentum And Strings
Today, I would like to develop momentum as proof that matter actually consists of strings in four-dimensional space instead of particles in three-dimensional space as we perceive. As I described in the theory, our consciousness moves along the bundle of strings that compose our bodies and brains at the speed we perceive as the speed of light.
Light and other electromagnetic radiation actually consists of stationary ripples in space caused by bends in strings. These strings and bundles of strings are aligned in space along that dimension of space that we cannot see but perceive as time so that we experience other bundles as strings as three-dimensional objects because we can only see in the plane perpendicular to the spatial dimension that we perceive as time.
Have you ever thought about how strange it is that if there is an object in outer space free of gravity and we apply a force to the object, the object will continue in the same direction even after the force is removed from it? The logic that governs all other aspects of physics seems to demand that the object would move as long as the force is applied to it but would stop when the force is removed. It is as if the force is "still with" the object regardless of when the force is removed.
What about falling objects? Suppose we drop a compact object from a high place, even though the force of gravity on it is constant, the speed of the object will increase until it hits the ground. Just as with the object in space, it is as if the force of gravity from earlier in the object's fall is "still with" the object throughout it's fall.
When an object is moved by a force, whether it is gravity or another force away from gravity, time makes no difference. When a force is applied to an object, that force is always with the object regardless of the passage of time after the removal of the force. As for the object in space, conventional newtonian physics tells us that if an object is in motion, it must always remain in motion until acted on by an outside force.
This is fine for everyday physics. But space itself must act upon a motionless object to keep it in place. If it were not, then objects in open space would spontanously move or relocate.
In my theory, I established that space must consist of infinitesimal alternating electric charges. This means that it is charge attraction and repulsion on the boundaries of an object in space that holds it in place until it is moved. But this means that, once again, while an object in open space could be moved by a force applied to it, the motion should cease when the force is discontinued.
Yet it does not, if there was a chunk of rock in space and a force is applied to it for five seconds, it will continue on forever in the same direction until acted on by another force. But yet if space clearly acts to hold a stationary object in place, why does it not resist the movement of the chunk of rock now that the force has been removed from it?
The answer is very simple but it requires a rearrangement of our understanding of reality. It requires acceptance of the Theory Of Stationary Space that I have presented. If the force, whether gravity on the falling object or the force on the rock in open space, is not acting on a three-dimensional object in three-dimensional space as we perceive it but bending a bundle of strings in four-dimensional space, then everything falls right into place.
As we move forward in what we perceive as time, the bend in the bundle remains after the force appears to us to have been discontinued. The reason that time is not a factor in momentum, whether in the falling object or the rock in free space is, of course, that it does not really exist, it is only something that we perceive. The bend caused by the force in what we perceive as the bundle's past is still with it and has affected it's directional orientation in space.
The reason that we perceive the speed of light as the maximum possible velocity anything can travel is that in terms of bending a bundle of strings, it is represented by a right angle bend and that is the maximum possible bend. I do not hesitate to state that if objects were composed of particles rather than strings as conventional science supposes, falling objects would fall at a constant rate and an object in open space moved by a force would remain still after the force was removed.
Light and other electromagnetic radiation actually consists of stationary ripples in space caused by bends in strings. These strings and bundles of strings are aligned in space along that dimension of space that we cannot see but perceive as time so that we experience other bundles as strings as three-dimensional objects because we can only see in the plane perpendicular to the spatial dimension that we perceive as time.
Have you ever thought about how strange it is that if there is an object in outer space free of gravity and we apply a force to the object, the object will continue in the same direction even after the force is removed from it? The logic that governs all other aspects of physics seems to demand that the object would move as long as the force is applied to it but would stop when the force is removed. It is as if the force is "still with" the object regardless of when the force is removed.
What about falling objects? Suppose we drop a compact object from a high place, even though the force of gravity on it is constant, the speed of the object will increase until it hits the ground. Just as with the object in space, it is as if the force of gravity from earlier in the object's fall is "still with" the object throughout it's fall.
When an object is moved by a force, whether it is gravity or another force away from gravity, time makes no difference. When a force is applied to an object, that force is always with the object regardless of the passage of time after the removal of the force. As for the object in space, conventional newtonian physics tells us that if an object is in motion, it must always remain in motion until acted on by an outside force.
This is fine for everyday physics. But space itself must act upon a motionless object to keep it in place. If it were not, then objects in open space would spontanously move or relocate.
In my theory, I established that space must consist of infinitesimal alternating electric charges. This means that it is charge attraction and repulsion on the boundaries of an object in space that holds it in place until it is moved. But this means that, once again, while an object in open space could be moved by a force applied to it, the motion should cease when the force is discontinued.
Yet it does not, if there was a chunk of rock in space and a force is applied to it for five seconds, it will continue on forever in the same direction until acted on by another force. But yet if space clearly acts to hold a stationary object in place, why does it not resist the movement of the chunk of rock now that the force has been removed from it?
The answer is very simple but it requires a rearrangement of our understanding of reality. It requires acceptance of the Theory Of Stationary Space that I have presented. If the force, whether gravity on the falling object or the force on the rock in open space, is not acting on a three-dimensional object in three-dimensional space as we perceive it but bending a bundle of strings in four-dimensional space, then everything falls right into place.
As we move forward in what we perceive as time, the bend in the bundle remains after the force appears to us to have been discontinued. The reason that time is not a factor in momentum, whether in the falling object or the rock in free space is, of course, that it does not really exist, it is only something that we perceive. The bend caused by the force in what we perceive as the bundle's past is still with it and has affected it's directional orientation in space.
The reason that we perceive the speed of light as the maximum possible velocity anything can travel is that in terms of bending a bundle of strings, it is represented by a right angle bend and that is the maximum possible bend. I do not hesitate to state that if objects were composed of particles rather than strings as conventional science supposes, falling objects would fall at a constant rate and an object in open space moved by a force would remain still after the force was removed.
The Possibility Of Seeing In Time
I do not have much enthusiasm for the possibility of practical time travel. However, capturing light from the past or future to make an image may be a different story.
As we know, electromagnetic waves such as light radiate into space at right angles from the body of matter which produces or reflects the waves. As I described on my cosmology blog, there must be at least four dimensions of space, three of which we experience as space and one as time. But this arrangement is simply due to the configuration resulting from the throw pattern of matter in the Big Bang, which was the beginning of the universe as we know it.
There is no set rule concerning which one of the dimensions must function as the time dimension. It all depends upon the direction in which the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains is aligned. We actually occupy all four dimensions of space, but matter which includes our bodies and brains is aligned mostly along one of the dimensions and we can only see at right angles to the present position of our consciousnesses so that we perceive this dimension as time and the other three as space.
It is when an object is in apparent motion that it extends, but usually only at a very slight angle, into the dimension of space that we perceive as time. It is only when an object is moving at what we perceive as the speed of light that it's time dimension becomes one of our spatial dimensions, depending on the direction in which it is moving, and our time dimension becomes one of it's spatial dimensions.
This means, as I described in detail on the cosmology blog, that the reason any object appears to us to be in motion is that we do not occupy the same dimensional set as our consciousness proceeds at what we perceive as the speed of light along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains, which are aligned along the dimension of space that we perceive as time.
There must be light, and other electromagnetic radiation, along the fourth spatial dimension, which is the one that we perceive as time. If everything in the universe remained perfectly still, then this would not be the case. But nearly everything in the universe is in constant motion in one way or another, even if we do not perceive it. We know that our earth rotates and revolves around the sun. Our galaxy also undergoes rotation at a significant portion of the speed of light and at the same time, the universe is expanding at a high rate of speed.
When an object is at rest, from our perspective, the light that it radiates is entirely in our three dimensions of space. But when the object is in apparent motion, relative to us, it's dimensional set is different from ours so that some of the light that it radiates goes into the dimension of space that we are experiencing as time.
The principle is the same as that of a sign that is facing you until it is turned partially away from you. The exposure can be expressed as the cosine of the angle of the sign relative to your perspective. The remainder of the light from the sign moves in a direction parallel to you so that you do not see it.
All objects can radiate or reflect light and other radiation. But because they do not share exactly the same space-time configuration due to relative motion, there must be light moving along the dimension of space that we perceive as time that we cannot see.
Light radiates at right angles to strings of matter, of which the predominant alignment is in one direction due to the throw pattern of matter in the Big Bang. but since virtually all matter is in some type of motion, plenty of light gets into the time dimension. This light runs parallel to the movement of our consciousnesses along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains so that we do not see it. If we only could see this light, we would be seeing backwards or forwards in time.
This means that if we could find a way to travel at what we perceive as the speed of light, meaning that the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains was bent at a right angle, what had been the time dimension when we were at rest would now be one of the spatial dimensions and we would see into the past in one direction and the future in the opposite direction. But attaining the speed of light, or anything close to it, is simply not practical with existing technology.
But I got to thinking about what would happen if we could get a beam of light, travelling at the speed of light from our perspective, to somehow take a photograph.
We cannot practically travel anywhere near what we perceive as the speed of light so that we can see into time. We are only capable of bending the bundles of strings composing matter at a slight angle, which we perceive as low speed. But light, by it's very definition, moves at what we perceive as the speed of light.
When we send out a beam of light into space, it must interact with light that we cannot see because our beam's space-time configuration is different from ours by one dimension. Due to the fact that just about all matter is in some type of relative motion, it will radiate or reflect light into our time dimension that we cannot see.
When we send out the beam of light, it will not be perfectly perpendicular to virtually all light in our time dimension due to this universal relative motion. This opens the possibility that we could send out very finely-controlled beams of light and then form an image from the time dimension from the subtle modulations in the beam's frequency and amplitude caused by the otherwise undetectable light in our time dimension. It is, of course, vital that the beam not be modulated by any light parallel to it, or that we learn to cancel out any such modulations.
Electromagnetic waves, such as light and radio waves, can modulate one another. If it is desirable to beam a radio signal, rather than broadcasting it, dual antennas can be set up so that the waves undergo constructive and destructive interference. The signal is cancelled out in one direction and reinforced in a perpendicular direction. Two signals relatively close in frequency can also modulate one another to a median common frequency, this is the principle used in superheterodyne radio receivers.
I established that while our consciousnesses move along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light, we see toward the past direction at an angle of 45 degrees.
Light is two-dimensional, as we can see in the sine wave on an oscilloscope, and it requires two equal dimensions, or else we would see in one dimension of space more than another. The only way that we can see in two equal dimensions is to see at a 45 degree angle.
This is why we are looking 36 years into the past when we look at a star that is 36 light years distant. It is not that other light is not there, it is just that we cannot see it. For an explanation of why light must be two-dimensional, you can read "The Nature Of Electromagnetic Waves", also on this blog.
When we deal with time, we must remember that it does not exist in absolute reality but is only something that we perceive. This is why physics has gotten essentially nowhere in explaining the nature of time. Since it is something in our nature, it cannot be explained by the laws of physics alone.
The movement of our consciousness along the bundle of strings composing our bodies and brains is somewhat like an hourglass built with 45 degree angles. We see into the past at 45 degrees, which is why we see stars in time according to how far away they are in light-years. But when we undergo an action, we act at 45 degrees into the future because that is where the momentum of our consciousness is taking us.
When we shine a beam of light into space, we are actually shining it at 45 degrees into our future. This is why we can shine a beam of light into a mirror and have it reflected back to us. It actually reflects back essentially instantaneously but we do not see it until our consciousness, moving at what we perceive as the speed of light, reaches the point where the beam intersects back to our bundle of strings.
So, if we see at 45 degrees into the past, and a beam of light that we send into space is aligned at 90 degrees from that, at 45 degrees into our future, that means that light in space parallel to us, from the past dimension that we can only see at 45 degrees, will be aligned so that it intersects our outward beam of light at 45 degrees. If we could only capture that light, by having it modulate the beam of light that we have sent out, we could look directly into the past dimension instead of at the 45 degree angle.
Just think of a pulse of laser light as a spacecraft that will travel at what we perceive as the speed of light and get a view of the space-time configuration that differs from ours. There is, of course, really no speed of light. Our consciousness moves along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light and an object seen as moving at the speed of light is actually a string or bundle of strings bent or aligned at right angles to our bundle of strings.
The operation of the time camera is similar in principle to the amplitude modulation (AM) or frequency modulation (FM) of a carrier wave that is used in ordinary radio broadcasting. Upon reception, the carrier wave is removed so that only the signal which modulated that wave remains. Except that the time camera will use lasers. Lasers are already used extensively for communication, so that this is mostly existing technology.
A multitude of fine lasers of all visible colors (colours) will be beamed out into space to a reflector and then received back. Until the light reaches the reflector, unseen light from the past dimension will meet it at 45 degrees so that it will be modulated by the light that is of the same frequency.
With very finely-controlled laser light, we could separate out the minute variations in wavelength and amplitude induced by the light from the past dimension and actually glean a phtotograph of light from the past that we could not otherwise see. It is vital to use weak, low-amplitude lasers which can be noticably modulated by faint light.
On the return journey from the reflector, the laser light will be modulated by light from the future in the same way. To separate the past from the future, we could possibly have a copy of the signal sent back from the reflector by cable so that it is only modulated by light from the past, and not by the future. A fresh pulse of light, free of any modulation, could be sent back from the reflector so that it is only modulated by light from the future direction, and not from the past.
Remember that if we look into the future, we will see only inanimate matter because life, moving along in the frontier that we call the present, has not yet arrived there. For a further explanation see "The Consciousness Barrier" on the cosmology blog, with some parts still on the main blog.
Also remember that most of what we will see in a time photograph is space. Since the earth orbits the sun, we could see a series of earths, each one light-year behind the other. For practical use, the time camera will have to be coupled with an extremely powerful telescope. The photo should also be taken from space because otherwise, the earth itself may block our view. But whatever the practical value of the time camera turns out to be, it will certainly reveal new facts about the universe.
As we know, electromagnetic waves such as light radiate into space at right angles from the body of matter which produces or reflects the waves. As I described on my cosmology blog, there must be at least four dimensions of space, three of which we experience as space and one as time. But this arrangement is simply due to the configuration resulting from the throw pattern of matter in the Big Bang, which was the beginning of the universe as we know it.
There is no set rule concerning which one of the dimensions must function as the time dimension. It all depends upon the direction in which the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains is aligned. We actually occupy all four dimensions of space, but matter which includes our bodies and brains is aligned mostly along one of the dimensions and we can only see at right angles to the present position of our consciousnesses so that we perceive this dimension as time and the other three as space.
It is when an object is in apparent motion that it extends, but usually only at a very slight angle, into the dimension of space that we perceive as time. It is only when an object is moving at what we perceive as the speed of light that it's time dimension becomes one of our spatial dimensions, depending on the direction in which it is moving, and our time dimension becomes one of it's spatial dimensions.
This means, as I described in detail on the cosmology blog, that the reason any object appears to us to be in motion is that we do not occupy the same dimensional set as our consciousness proceeds at what we perceive as the speed of light along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains, which are aligned along the dimension of space that we perceive as time.
There must be light, and other electromagnetic radiation, along the fourth spatial dimension, which is the one that we perceive as time. If everything in the universe remained perfectly still, then this would not be the case. But nearly everything in the universe is in constant motion in one way or another, even if we do not perceive it. We know that our earth rotates and revolves around the sun. Our galaxy also undergoes rotation at a significant portion of the speed of light and at the same time, the universe is expanding at a high rate of speed.
When an object is at rest, from our perspective, the light that it radiates is entirely in our three dimensions of space. But when the object is in apparent motion, relative to us, it's dimensional set is different from ours so that some of the light that it radiates goes into the dimension of space that we are experiencing as time.
The principle is the same as that of a sign that is facing you until it is turned partially away from you. The exposure can be expressed as the cosine of the angle of the sign relative to your perspective. The remainder of the light from the sign moves in a direction parallel to you so that you do not see it.
All objects can radiate or reflect light and other radiation. But because they do not share exactly the same space-time configuration due to relative motion, there must be light moving along the dimension of space that we perceive as time that we cannot see.
Light radiates at right angles to strings of matter, of which the predominant alignment is in one direction due to the throw pattern of matter in the Big Bang. but since virtually all matter is in some type of motion, plenty of light gets into the time dimension. This light runs parallel to the movement of our consciousnesses along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains so that we do not see it. If we only could see this light, we would be seeing backwards or forwards in time.
This means that if we could find a way to travel at what we perceive as the speed of light, meaning that the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains was bent at a right angle, what had been the time dimension when we were at rest would now be one of the spatial dimensions and we would see into the past in one direction and the future in the opposite direction. But attaining the speed of light, or anything close to it, is simply not practical with existing technology.
But I got to thinking about what would happen if we could get a beam of light, travelling at the speed of light from our perspective, to somehow take a photograph.
We cannot practically travel anywhere near what we perceive as the speed of light so that we can see into time. We are only capable of bending the bundles of strings composing matter at a slight angle, which we perceive as low speed. But light, by it's very definition, moves at what we perceive as the speed of light.
When we send out a beam of light into space, it must interact with light that we cannot see because our beam's space-time configuration is different from ours by one dimension. Due to the fact that just about all matter is in some type of relative motion, it will radiate or reflect light into our time dimension that we cannot see.
When we send out the beam of light, it will not be perfectly perpendicular to virtually all light in our time dimension due to this universal relative motion. This opens the possibility that we could send out very finely-controlled beams of light and then form an image from the time dimension from the subtle modulations in the beam's frequency and amplitude caused by the otherwise undetectable light in our time dimension. It is, of course, vital that the beam not be modulated by any light parallel to it, or that we learn to cancel out any such modulations.
Electromagnetic waves, such as light and radio waves, can modulate one another. If it is desirable to beam a radio signal, rather than broadcasting it, dual antennas can be set up so that the waves undergo constructive and destructive interference. The signal is cancelled out in one direction and reinforced in a perpendicular direction. Two signals relatively close in frequency can also modulate one another to a median common frequency, this is the principle used in superheterodyne radio receivers.
I established that while our consciousnesses move along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light, we see toward the past direction at an angle of 45 degrees.
Light is two-dimensional, as we can see in the sine wave on an oscilloscope, and it requires two equal dimensions, or else we would see in one dimension of space more than another. The only way that we can see in two equal dimensions is to see at a 45 degree angle.
This is why we are looking 36 years into the past when we look at a star that is 36 light years distant. It is not that other light is not there, it is just that we cannot see it. For an explanation of why light must be two-dimensional, you can read "The Nature Of Electromagnetic Waves", also on this blog.
When we deal with time, we must remember that it does not exist in absolute reality but is only something that we perceive. This is why physics has gotten essentially nowhere in explaining the nature of time. Since it is something in our nature, it cannot be explained by the laws of physics alone.
The movement of our consciousness along the bundle of strings composing our bodies and brains is somewhat like an hourglass built with 45 degree angles. We see into the past at 45 degrees, which is why we see stars in time according to how far away they are in light-years. But when we undergo an action, we act at 45 degrees into the future because that is where the momentum of our consciousness is taking us.
When we shine a beam of light into space, we are actually shining it at 45 degrees into our future. This is why we can shine a beam of light into a mirror and have it reflected back to us. It actually reflects back essentially instantaneously but we do not see it until our consciousness, moving at what we perceive as the speed of light, reaches the point where the beam intersects back to our bundle of strings.
So, if we see at 45 degrees into the past, and a beam of light that we send into space is aligned at 90 degrees from that, at 45 degrees into our future, that means that light in space parallel to us, from the past dimension that we can only see at 45 degrees, will be aligned so that it intersects our outward beam of light at 45 degrees. If we could only capture that light, by having it modulate the beam of light that we have sent out, we could look directly into the past dimension instead of at the 45 degree angle.
Just think of a pulse of laser light as a spacecraft that will travel at what we perceive as the speed of light and get a view of the space-time configuration that differs from ours. There is, of course, really no speed of light. Our consciousness moves along the bundles of strings composing our bodies and brains at what we perceive as the speed of light and an object seen as moving at the speed of light is actually a string or bundle of strings bent or aligned at right angles to our bundle of strings.
The operation of the time camera is similar in principle to the amplitude modulation (AM) or frequency modulation (FM) of a carrier wave that is used in ordinary radio broadcasting. Upon reception, the carrier wave is removed so that only the signal which modulated that wave remains. Except that the time camera will use lasers. Lasers are already used extensively for communication, so that this is mostly existing technology.
A multitude of fine lasers of all visible colors (colours) will be beamed out into space to a reflector and then received back. Until the light reaches the reflector, unseen light from the past dimension will meet it at 45 degrees so that it will be modulated by the light that is of the same frequency.
With very finely-controlled laser light, we could separate out the minute variations in wavelength and amplitude induced by the light from the past dimension and actually glean a phtotograph of light from the past that we could not otherwise see. It is vital to use weak, low-amplitude lasers which can be noticably modulated by faint light.
On the return journey from the reflector, the laser light will be modulated by light from the future in the same way. To separate the past from the future, we could possibly have a copy of the signal sent back from the reflector by cable so that it is only modulated by light from the past, and not by the future. A fresh pulse of light, free of any modulation, could be sent back from the reflector so that it is only modulated by light from the future direction, and not from the past.
Remember that if we look into the future, we will see only inanimate matter because life, moving along in the frontier that we call the present, has not yet arrived there. For a further explanation see "The Consciousness Barrier" on the cosmology blog, with some parts still on the main blog.
Also remember that most of what we will see in a time photograph is space. Since the earth orbits the sun, we could see a series of earths, each one light-year behind the other. For practical use, the time camera will have to be coupled with an extremely powerful telescope. The photo should also be taken from space because otherwise, the earth itself may block our view. But whatever the practical value of the time camera turns out to be, it will certainly reveal new facts about the universe.
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