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From: mpc755 on 2 Jun 2010 13:08 On Jun 2, 11:10 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > With aether, the physics of nature are easily understood. > > Aether and matter are different states of the same material. > The material is mæther. > Mæther has mass. > Aether and matter have mass. > Aether is uncompressed mæther and matter is compressed mæther. > Aether is displaced by matter. > The aether is not at rest when displaced and 'displaces back'. > The 'displacing back' is the pressure exerted by the aether. > Gravity is pressure exerted by displaced aether towards matter. > > 'Ether and the Theory of Relativity by Albert Einstein'http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Einstein_ether.html > > "the state of the [ether] is at every place determined by connections > with the matter and the state of the ether in neighbouring places, > ... disregarding the causes which condition its state." > > The state of the aether as determined by its connections with the > matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places is the > aether's state of displacement. > > A moving C-60 molecule has an associated aether displacement wave. The > C-60 molecule enters and exits a single slit. The aether wave enters > and exits multiple slits. The aether wave creates interference upon > exiting the slits which alters the direction the C-60 molecule > travels. Detecting the C-60 molecule causes decoherence of the aether > wave and there is not interference. > > 'DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY-CONTENT? > By A. EINSTEIN'http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/E_mc2/e_mc2.pdf > > "If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass > diminishes by L/c2." > > The mass of the body does diminish, but the matter which no longer > exists as part of the body has not vanished. It still exists, as > aether. As the matter transitions to aether it expands in three > dimensions. The effect this transition has on the surrounding aether > and matter is energy. > > Mass does not convert to energy. Matter converts to aether. As the > mæther transitions from matter to aether it increases in volume. The > physical effect the increase in volume has on the neighboring matter > and aether is energy. > > The physical effect of mæther decompressing is energy. > > Mass is conserved. > > The rate at which an atomic clock 'ticks' is based upon the aether > pressure in which it exists. In terms of motion, the speed of a GPS > satellite with respect to the aether causes it to displace more aether > and for that aether to exert more pressure on the clock in the GPS > satellite than the aether pressure associated with a clock at rest > with respect to the Earth. This causes the GPS satellite clock to > "result in a delay of about 7 ìs/day". The aether pressure associated > with the aether displaced by the Earth exerts less pressure on the GPS > satellite than a similar clock at rest on the Earth "causing the GPS > clocks to appear faster by about 45 ìs/day". The aether pressure > associated with the speed at which the GPS satellite moves with > respect to the aether and the aether pressure associated with the > aether displaced by the Earth causes "clocks on the GPS satellites > [to] tick approximately 38 ìs/day faster than clocks on the ground." > (quoted text fromhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_relativity_on_GPS). 'The Need to Understand Mass' By Roger Cashmore Department of Physics University of Oxford, UK. http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs2.htm "What determines the size of objects that we see around us or indeed even the size of ourselves? The answer is the size of the molecules and in turn the atoms that compose these molecules. But what determines the size of the atoms themselves? Quantum theory and atomic physics provide an answer. The size of the atom is determined by the paths of the electrons orbiting the nucleus. The size of those orbits, however, is determined by the mass of the electron. Were the electron's mass smaller, the orbits (and hence all atoms) would be smaller, and consequently everything we see would be smaller. So understanding the mass of the electron is essential to understanding the size and dimensions of everything around us. It might be hard to understand the origin of one quantity, that quantity being the mass of the electron. Fortunately nature has given us more than one elementary particle and they come with a wide variety of masses. The lightest particle is the electron and the heaviest particle is believed to be the particle called the top quark, which weighs at least 200,000 times as much as an electron. With this variety of particles and masses we should have a clue to the individual masses of the particles. Unfortunately if you try and write down a theory of particles and their interactions then the simplest version requires all the masses of the particles to be zero. So on one hand we have a whole variety of masses and on the other a theory in which all masses should be zero. Such conundrums provide the excitement and the challenges of science. There is, however, one very clever and very elegant solution to this problem, a solution first proposed by Peter Higgs. He proposed that the whole of space is permeated by a field, similar in some ways to the electromagnetic field. As particles move through space they travel through this field, and if they interact with it they acquire what appears to be mass. This is similar to the action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid. the larger the interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear to have. Thus the existence of this field is essential in Higg's hypothesis for the production of the mass of particles. We know from quantum theory that fields have particles associated with them, the particle for the electromagnetic field being the photon. So there must be a particle associated with the Higg's field, and this is the Higgs boson. Finding the Higgs boson is thus the key to discovering whether the Higgs field does exist and whether our best hypothesis for the origin of mass is indeed correct." The "action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid" is the particles interaction with the aether.
From: mpc755 on 2 Jun 2010 13:17 On Jun 2, 1:08 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 2, 11:10 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > With aether, the physics of nature are easily understood. > > > Aether and matter are different states of the same material. > > The material is mæther. > > Mæther has mass. > > Aether and matter have mass. > > Aether is uncompressed mæther and matter is compressed mæther. > > Aether is displaced by matter. > > The aether is not at rest when displaced and 'displaces back'. > > The 'displacing back' is the pressure exerted by the aether. > > Gravity is pressure exerted by displaced aether towards matter. > > > 'Ether and the Theory of Relativity by Albert Einstein'http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Einstein_ether.html > > > "the state of the [ether] is at every place determined by connections > > with the matter and the state of the ether in neighbouring places, > > ... disregarding the causes which condition its state." > > > The state of the aether as determined by its connections with the > > matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places is the > > aether's state of displacement. > > > A moving C-60 molecule has an associated aether displacement wave. The > > C-60 molecule enters and exits a single slit. The aether wave enters > > and exits multiple slits. The aether wave creates interference upon > > exiting the slits which alters the direction the C-60 molecule > > travels. Detecting the C-60 molecule causes decoherence of the aether > > wave and there is not interference. > > > 'DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY-CONTENT? > > By A. EINSTEIN'http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/E_mc2/e_mc2.pdf > > > "If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass > > diminishes by L/c2." > > > The mass of the body does diminish, but the matter which no longer > > exists as part of the body has not vanished. It still exists, as > > aether. As the matter transitions to aether it expands in three > > dimensions. The effect this transition has on the surrounding aether > > and matter is energy. > > > Mass does not convert to energy. Matter converts to aether. As the > > mæther transitions from matter to aether it increases in volume. The > > physical effect the increase in volume has on the neighboring matter > > and aether is energy. > > > The physical effect of mæther decompressing is energy. > > > Mass is conserved. > > > The rate at which an atomic clock 'ticks' is based upon the aether > > pressure in which it exists. In terms of motion, the speed of a GPS > > satellite with respect to the aether causes it to displace more aether > > and for that aether to exert more pressure on the clock in the GPS > > satellite than the aether pressure associated with a clock at rest > > with respect to the Earth. This causes the GPS satellite clock to > > "result in a delay of about 7 ìs/day". The aether pressure associated > > with the aether displaced by the Earth exerts less pressure on the GPS > > satellite than a similar clock at rest on the Earth "causing the GPS > > clocks to appear faster by about 45 ìs/day". The aether pressure > > associated with the speed at which the GPS satellite moves with > > respect to the aether and the aether pressure associated with the > > aether displaced by the Earth causes "clocks on the GPS satellites > > [to] tick approximately 38 ìs/day faster than clocks on the ground." > > (quoted text fromhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_relativity_on_GPS). > > 'The Need to Understand Mass' > By Roger Cashmore > Department of Physics > University of Oxford, UK.http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs2.htm > > "What determines the size of objects that we see around us or indeed > even the size of ourselves? The answer is the size of the molecules > and in turn the atoms that compose these molecules. But what > determines the size of the atoms themselves? Quantum theory and atomic > physics provide an answer. The size of the atom is determined by the > paths of the electrons orbiting the nucleus. The size of those orbits, > however, is determined by the mass of the electron. Were the > electron's mass smaller, the orbits (and hence all atoms) would be > smaller, and consequently everything we see would be smaller. So > understanding the mass of the electron is essential to understanding > the size and dimensions of everything around us. > > It might be hard to understand the origin of one quantity, that > quantity being the mass of the electron. Fortunately nature has given > us more than one elementary particle and they come with a wide variety > of masses. The lightest particle is the electron and the heaviest > particle is believed to be the particle called the top quark, which > weighs at least 200,000 times as much as an electron. With this > variety of particles and masses we should have a clue to the > individual masses of the particles. > > Unfortunately if you try and write down a theory of particles and > their interactions then the simplest version requires all the masses > of the particles to be zero. So on one hand we have a whole variety of > masses and on the other a theory in which all masses should be zero. > Such conundrums provide the excitement and the challenges of science. > > There is, however, one very clever and very elegant solution to this > problem, a solution first proposed by Peter Higgs. He proposed that > the whole of space is permeated by a field, similar in some ways to > the electromagnetic field. As particles move through space they travel > through this field, and if they interact with it they acquire what > appears to be mass. This is similar to the action of viscous forces > felt by particles moving through any thick liquid. the larger the > interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear > to have. Thus the existence of this field is essential in Higg's > hypothesis for the production of the mass of particles. > > We know from quantum theory that fields have particles associated with > them, the particle for the electromagnetic field being the photon. So > there must be a particle associated with the Higg's field, and this is > the Higgs boson. Finding the Higgs boson is thus the key to > discovering whether the Higgs field does exist and whether our best > hypothesis for the origin of mass is indeed correct." > > The "action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any > thick liquid" is the particles interaction with the aether. 'Politics, Solid State and the Higgs' By David Miller Department of Physics and Astronomy University College, London, UK. http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs3.htm "1. The Higgs Mechanism In three dimensions, and with the complications of relativity, this is the Higgs mechanism. In order to give particles mass, a background field is invented which becomes locally distorted whenever a particle moves through it. The distortion - the clustering of the field around the particle - generates the particle's mass. The idea comes directly from the physics of solids. Instead of a field spread throughout all space a solid contains a lattice of positively charged crystal atoms. When an electron moves through the lattice the atoms are attracted to it, causing the electron's effective mass to be as much as 40 times bigger than the mass of a free electron." The distortion of the background field is the displacement of the aether by the moving particle. The 'clustering' of the field around the particle is the aether 'displacing back'. The 'clustering' of the field is the pressure exerted by the aether towards the particle. "The idea comes directly from the physics of solids." The aether behaves a a frictionless superfluid 'one something'.
From: mpc755 on 2 Jun 2010 13:25 On Jun 2, 1:17 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 2, 1:08 pm, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > On Jun 2, 11:10 am, mpc755 <mpc...(a)gmail.com> wrote: > > > > With aether, the physics of nature are easily understood. > > > > Aether and matter are different states of the same material. > > > The material is mæther. > > > Mæther has mass. > > > Aether and matter have mass. > > > Aether is uncompressed mæther and matter is compressed mæther. > > > Aether is displaced by matter. > > > The aether is not at rest when displaced and 'displaces back'. > > > The 'displacing back' is the pressure exerted by the aether. > > > Gravity is pressure exerted by displaced aether towards matter. > > > > 'Ether and the Theory of Relativity by Albert Einstein'http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Einstein_ether.html > > > > "the state of the [ether] is at every place determined by connections > > > with the matter and the state of the ether in neighbouring places, > > > ... disregarding the causes which condition its state." > > > > The state of the aether as determined by its connections with the > > > matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places is the > > > aether's state of displacement. > > > > A moving C-60 molecule has an associated aether displacement wave. The > > > C-60 molecule enters and exits a single slit. The aether wave enters > > > and exits multiple slits. The aether wave creates interference upon > > > exiting the slits which alters the direction the C-60 molecule > > > travels. Detecting the C-60 molecule causes decoherence of the aether > > > wave and there is not interference. > > > > 'DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY-CONTENT? > > > By A. EINSTEIN'http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/E_mc2/e_mc2.pdf > > > > "If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass > > > diminishes by L/c2." > > > > The mass of the body does diminish, but the matter which no longer > > > exists as part of the body has not vanished. It still exists, as > > > aether. As the matter transitions to aether it expands in three > > > dimensions. The effect this transition has on the surrounding aether > > > and matter is energy. > > > > Mass does not convert to energy. Matter converts to aether. As the > > > mæther transitions from matter to aether it increases in volume. The > > > physical effect the increase in volume has on the neighboring matter > > > and aether is energy. > > > > The physical effect of mæther decompressing is energy. > > > > Mass is conserved. > > > > The rate at which an atomic clock 'ticks' is based upon the aether > > > pressure in which it exists. In terms of motion, the speed of a GPS > > > satellite with respect to the aether causes it to displace more aether > > > and for that aether to exert more pressure on the clock in the GPS > > > satellite than the aether pressure associated with a clock at rest > > > with respect to the Earth. This causes the GPS satellite clock to > > > "result in a delay of about 7 ìs/day". The aether pressure associated > > > with the aether displaced by the Earth exerts less pressure on the GPS > > > satellite than a similar clock at rest on the Earth "causing the GPS > > > clocks to appear faster by about 45 ìs/day". The aether pressure > > > associated with the speed at which the GPS satellite moves with > > > respect to the aether and the aether pressure associated with the > > > aether displaced by the Earth causes "clocks on the GPS satellites > > > [to] tick approximately 38 ìs/day faster than clocks on the ground." > > > (quoted text fromhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_relativity_on_GPS). > > > 'The Need to Understand Mass' > > By Roger Cashmore > > Department of Physics > > University of Oxford, UK. > > http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs2.htm > > > "What determines the size of objects that we see around us or indeed > > even the size of ourselves? The answer is the size of the molecules > > and in turn the atoms that compose these molecules. But what > > determines the size of the atoms themselves? Quantum theory and atomic > > physics provide an answer. The size of the atom is determined by the > > paths of the electrons orbiting the nucleus. The size of those orbits, > > however, is determined by the mass of the electron. Were the > > electron's mass smaller, the orbits (and hence all atoms) would be > > smaller, and consequently everything we see would be smaller. So > > understanding the mass of the electron is essential to understanding > > the size and dimensions of everything around us. > > > It might be hard to understand the origin of one quantity, that > > quantity being the mass of the electron. Fortunately nature has given > > us more than one elementary particle and they come with a wide variety > > of masses. The lightest particle is the electron and the heaviest > > particle is believed to be the particle called the top quark, which > > weighs at least 200,000 times as much as an electron. With this > > variety of particles and masses we should have a clue to the > > individual masses of the particles. > > > Unfortunately if you try and write down a theory of particles and > > their interactions then the simplest version requires all the masses > > of the particles to be zero. So on one hand we have a whole variety of > > masses and on the other a theory in which all masses should be zero. > > Such conundrums provide the excitement and the challenges of science. > > > There is, however, one very clever and very elegant solution to this > > problem, a solution first proposed by Peter Higgs. He proposed that > > the whole of space is permeated by a field, similar in some ways to > > the electromagnetic field. As particles move through space they travel > > through this field, and if they interact with it they acquire what > > appears to be mass. This is similar to the action of viscous forces > > felt by particles moving through any thick liquid. the larger the > > interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear > > to have. Thus the existence of this field is essential in Higg's > > hypothesis for the production of the mass of particles. > > > We know from quantum theory that fields have particles associated with > > them, the particle for the electromagnetic field being the photon. So > > there must be a particle associated with the Higg's field, and this is > > the Higgs boson. Finding the Higgs boson is thus the key to > > discovering whether the Higgs field does exist and whether our best > > hypothesis for the origin of mass is indeed correct." > > > The "action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any > > thick liquid" is the particles interaction with the aether. > > 'Politics, Solid State and the Higgs' > By David Miller > Department of Physics and Astronomy > University College, London, UK. > http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs3.htm > > "1. The Higgs Mechanism > In three dimensions, and with the complications of relativity, this is > the Higgs mechanism. In order to give particles mass, a background > field is invented which becomes locally distorted whenever a particle > moves through it. The distortion - the clustering of the field around > the particle - generates the particle's mass. The idea comes directly > from the physics of solids. Instead of a field spread throughout all > space a solid contains a lattice of positively charged crystal atoms. > When an electron moves through the lattice the atoms are attracted to > it, causing the electron's effective mass to be as much as 40 times > bigger than the mass of a free electron." > > The distortion of the background field is the displacement of the > aether by the moving particle. The 'clustering' of the field around > the particle is the aether 'displacing back'. The 'clustering' of the > field is the pressure exerted by the aether towards the particle. > > "The idea comes directly from the physics of solids." The aether > behaves a a frictionless superfluid 'one something'. The Need to Understand Mass' By Roger Cashmore Department of Physics University of Oxford, UK. http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs2.htm "There is, however, one very clever and very elegant solution to this problem, a solution first proposed by Peter Higgs. He proposed that the whole of space is permeated by a field, similar in some ways to the electromagnetic field. As particles move through space they travel through this field, and if they interact with it they acquire what appears to be mass. This is similar to the action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid. the larger the interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear to have. Thus the existence of this field is essential in Higg's hypothesis for the production of the mass of particles." The "action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid" is the particles interaction with the aether. The force is the pressure exerted by the displaced aether towards the particle. The "thick liquid" is the aether behaving as a frictionless superfluid 'one something'. "the larger the interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear to have." The faster the particle moves with respect to the aether, the greater the aether pressure exerted towards the particle.
From: mpc755 on 2 Jun 2010 13:46 With aether, the physics of nature are easily understood. Aether and matter are different states of the same material. The material is mæther. Mæther has mass. Aether and matter have mass. Aether is uncompressed mæther and matter is compressed mæther. Aether is displaced by matter. The aether is not at rest when displaced and 'displaces back'. The 'displacing back' is the pressure exerted by the aether. Gravity is pressure exerted by displaced aether towards matter. 'Ether and the Theory of Relativity by Albert Einstein' http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Einstein_ether.html "the state of the [ether] is at every place determined by connections with the matter and the state of the ether in neighbouring places, ... disregarding the causes which condition its state." The state of the aether as determined by its connections with the matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places is the aether's state of displacement. A moving C-60 molecule has an associated aether displacement wave. The C-60 molecule enters and exits a single slit. The aether wave enters and exits multiple slits. The aether wave creates interference upon exiting the slits which alters the direction the C-60 molecule travels. Detecting the C-60 molecule causes decoherence of the aether wave and there is not interference. 'DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY-CONTENT? By A. EINSTEIN' http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/E_mc2/e_mc2.pdf "If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass diminishes by L/c2." The mass of the body does diminish, but the matter which no longer exists as part of the body has not vanished. It still exists, as aether. As the matter transitions to aether it expands in three dimensions. The effect this transition has on the surrounding aether and matter is energy. Mass does not convert to energy. Matter converts to aether. As the mæther transitions from matter to aether it increases in volume. The physical effect the increase in volume has on the neighboring matter and aether is energy. The physical effect of mæther decompressing is energy. Mass is conserved. The rate at which an atomic clock 'ticks' is based upon the aether pressure in which it exists. In terms of motion, the speed of a GPS satellite with respect to the aether causes it to displace more aether and for that aether to exert more pressure on the clock in the GPS satellite than the aether pressure associated with a clock at rest with respect to the Earth. This causes the GPS satellite clock to "result in a delay of about 7 ìs/day". The aether pressure associated with the aether displaced by the Earth exerts less pressure on the GPS satellite than a similar clock at rest on the Earth "causing the GPS clocks to appear faster by about 45 ìs/day". The aether pressure associated with the speed at which the GPS satellite moves with respect to the aether and the aether pressure associated with the aether displaced by the Earth causes "clocks on the GPS satellites [to] tick approximately 38 ìs/day faster than clocks on the ground." (quoted text from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_relativity_on_GPS). 'The Need to Understand Mass' By Roger Cashmore Department of Physics University of Oxford, UK. http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs2.htm "There is, however, one very clever and very elegant solution to this problem, a solution first proposed by Peter Higgs. He proposed that the whole of space is permeated by a field, similar in some ways to the electromagnetic field. As particles move through space they travel through this field, and if they interact with it they acquire what appears to be mass. This is similar to the action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid. the larger the interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear to have. Thus the existence of this field is essential in Higg's hypothesis for the production of the mass of particles." The "action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid" is the particles interaction with the aether. The force is the pressure exerted by the displaced aether towards the particle. The "thick liquid" is the aether behaving as a frictionless superfluid 'one something'. "the larger the interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear to have." The faster the particle moves with respect to the aether, the greater the pressure exerted by the displaced aether towards the particle. 'Politics, Solid State and the Higgs' By David Miller Department of Physics and Astronomy University College, London, UK. http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs3.htm "1. The Higgs Mechanism In three dimensions, and with the complications of relativity, this is the Higgs mechanism. In order to give particles mass, a background field is invented which becomes locally distorted whenever a particle moves through it. The distortion - the clustering of the field around the particle - generates the particle's mass. The idea comes directly from the physics of solids. Instead of a field spread throughout all space a solid contains a lattice of positively charged crystal atoms. When an electron moves through the lattice the atoms are attracted to it, causing the electron's effective mass to be as much as 40 times bigger than the mass of a free electron." The distortion of the background field is the displacement of the aether by the moving particle. The 'clustering' of the field around the particle is the 'displacing back'. The 'clustering' of the field is the pressure exerted by the displaced aether towards the particle. "The idea comes directly from the physics of solids." The aether behaves as a frictionless superfluid 'one something'.
From: mpc755 on 2 Jun 2010 13:48
With aether, the physics of nature are easily understood. Aether and matter are different states of the same material. The material is mæther. Mæther has mass. Aether and matter have mass. Aether is uncompressed mæther and matter is compressed mæther. Aether is displaced by matter. The aether is not at rest when displaced and 'displaces back'. The 'displacing back' is the pressure exerted by the aether. Gravity is pressure exerted by displaced aether towards matter. 'Ether and the Theory of Relativity by Albert Einstein' http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Extras/Einstein_ether.html "the state of the [ether] is at every place determined by connections with the matter and the state of the ether in neighbouring places, ... disregarding the causes which condition its state." The state of the aether as determined by its connections with the matter and the state of the aether in neighboring places is the aether's state of displacement. A moving C-60 molecule has an associated aether displacement wave. The C-60 molecule enters and exits a single slit. The aether wave enters and exits multiple slits. The aether wave creates interference upon exiting the slits which alters the direction the C-60 molecule travels. Detecting the C-60 molecule causes decoherence of the aether wave and there is not interference. 'DOES THE INERTIA OF A BODY DEPEND UPON ITS ENERGY-CONTENT? By A. EINSTEIN' http://www.fourmilab.ch/etexts/einstein/E_mc2/e_mc2.pdf "If a body gives off the energy L in the form of radiation, its mass diminishes by L/c2." The mass of the body does diminish, but the matter which no longer exists as part of the body has not vanished. It still exists, as aether. As the matter transitions to aether it expands in three dimensions. The effect this transition has on the surrounding aether and matter is energy. Mass does not convert to energy. Matter converts to aether. As the mæther transitions from matter to aether it increases in volume. The physical effect the increase in volume has on the neighboring matter and aether is energy. The physical effect of mæther decompressing is energy. Mass is conserved. The rate at which an atomic clock 'ticks' is based upon the aether pressure in which it exists. In terms of motion, the speed of a GPS satellite with respect to the aether causes it to displace more aether and for that aether to exert more pressure on the clock in the GPS satellite than the aether pressure associated with a clock at rest with respect to the Earth. This causes the GPS satellite clock to "result in a delay of about 7 ìs/day". The aether pressure associated with the aether displaced by the Earth exerts less pressure on the GPS satellite than a similar clock at rest on the Earth "causing the GPS clocks to appear faster by about 45 ìs/day". The aether pressure associated with the speed at which the GPS satellite moves with respect to the aether and the aether pressure associated with the aether displaced by the Earth causes "clocks on the GPS satellites [to] tick approximately 38 ìs/day faster than clocks on the ground." (quoted text from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_relativity_on_GPS). 'The Need to Understand Mass' By Roger Cashmore Department of Physics University of Oxford, UK. http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs2.htm "There is, however, one very clever and very elegant solution to this problem, a solution first proposed by Peter Higgs. He proposed that the whole of space is permeated by a field, similar in some ways to the electromagnetic field. As particles move through space they travel through this field, and if they interact with it they acquire what appears to be mass. This is similar to the action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid. the larger the interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear to have. Thus the existence of this field is essential in Higg's hypothesis for the production of the mass of particles." The "action of viscous forces felt by particles moving through any thick liquid" is the particles interaction with the aether. The force is the pressure exerted by the displaced aether towards the particle. The "thick liquid" is the aether behaving as a frictionless superfluid 'one something'. "the larger the interaction of the particles with the field, the more mass they appear to have." The faster the particle moves with respect to the aether, the greater the pressure exerted by the displaced aether towards the particle. 'Politics, Solid State and the Higgs' By David Miller Department of Physics and Astronomy University College, London, UK. http://www.phy.uct.ac.za/courses/phy400w/particle/higgs3.htm "1. The Higgs Mechanism In three dimensions, and with the complications of relativity, this is the Higgs mechanism. In order to give particles mass, a background field is invented which becomes locally distorted whenever a particle moves through it. The distortion - the clustering of the field around the particle - generates the particle's mass. The idea comes directly from the physics of solids. Instead of a field spread throughout all space a solid contains a lattice of positively charged crystal atoms. When an electron moves through the lattice the atoms are attracted to it, causing the electron's effective mass to be as much as 40 times bigger than the mass of a free electron." The distortion of the background field is the displacement of the aether by the moving particle. The 'clustering' of the field around the particle is the 'displacing back'. The 'clustering' of the field is the pressure exerted by the displaced aether towards the particle. "The idea comes directly from the physics of solids." The aether behaves as a frictionless superfluid 'one something'. |