astro
07-05-2005, 02:17 PM
THE FOURTH DIMENSION IS EXPANDING AT A RATE OF C RELATIVE TO THE THREE SPATIAL DIMENSIONS IN UNITS OF THE PLANCK LENGTH, GIVING RISE TO TIME AND ALL QUANTUM MECHANICAL AND RELATIVISTIC PHENOMENA.
If you can find that, or anything similar anywhere, please do let me know!
Dr. E :)
http://physicsmathforums.com
Epsilon=One
08-02-2005, 04:12 AM
THE FOURTH DIMENSION IS EXPANDING AT A RATE OF C RELATIVE TO THE THREE SPATIAL DIMENSIONS IN UNITS OF THE PLANCK LENGTH, GIVING RISE TO TIME AND ALL QUANTUM MECHANICAL AND RELATIVISTIC PHENOMENA.
First speed (motion); then, time gives "rise" to the Inverse Square Law; then, orthogonal dimensions. There is importance to the order; if only, to avoid circular definitions. :).
The Planck length is contrived; that is, it is not Natural.
Have you considered the effects of cyclical time as well as linear?
All dimensions [(defined as references that describe location and characteristics: i.e. the usual 4 that are actually 5, plus: axial angle, spin (rotation), pulse (charge), speed, direction, system vector (particles to super, super galactic clusters), etc.] are expanding, often hyper-relativistically (see: EPR and motion of Cosmic bodies relative to gravitational effects, non-local phenomena, etc.). Dimensions within the internal structure of light and subatomic particles are hyper-relativistically oscillating (interactively, complexly, contracting and expanding).
The speed of light appears constant as inertia appears straight and constant. From an anthropic viewpoint the variance of light's speed and inertia's effects are minuscule. Not so, at galactic speeds and mass.
COBE observations; and, Krauss's analysis of said data concerning super, high-energy, background radiation are otherwise inexplicable.
If you can find that, or anything similar anywhere, please do let me know!
Dr. E :)
http://physicsmathforums.com
You seem to be doing fine by depending upon your intuition; and looking beyond your education.
"The only real valuable thing is intuition."
Albert Einstein [1878-1955]
"The only thing that interferes with my learning
is my education."
Albert Einstein [1878-1955]
vBulletin® v3.6.8, Copyright ©2000-2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.