Prev: Does the Lie Product formula work for infinite-dimensional operators?
Next: The reality of energy.
From: glird on 23 Feb 2010 16:29 On Feb 23, 2:35 pm, fitz <zeus...(a)yahoo.com> wrote: > Not Quite Everything for a Theory of Everything > (click link) > http://www.amperefitz.com/not.quite.everything.for.a.theory.of.everyt... I looked. It contains this: "Here is a quote from the Britannica 1997 CD telling about Einstein's tensor math which "led him to an essentially unique tensor equation for the law of gravitation, in which gravitation emerged not as a force but as a manifestation of the curvature of spacetime." The curvature of space-time is a product of a tensor equation. That has nothing to do with the fact that a force called "gravity" does physically exist. It continues thus: "As you see in the above Britannica quote, there is no such thing as force in the tensor math of General Relativity. Einstein assumed this universe was homogeneous and isotropic. This means a certain average space exists all throughout this universe. What you actually get - greatly simplifying things - is more spacetime, than this average, where repulsive force exists between two objects." Unless they are objects with electric charges of the same sign, or magnetized with the same polarity, a force of attraction exists between them. "In addition, there is less spacetime, than this average, existing between two gravitational objects that have an attractive force between them. Saul Perlmutter has shown, as in GR, that if repulsive force is more spacetime than this average then we get Einstein's cosmological constant (exact opposite repulsive force of gravity) and gravity becomes a bi-polar force like all the other invisible forces. And GR shows us the same thing that creates force must also be creating space!" Define "force". "What is it? It's the spin/orbital frequencies!" The frequency of an electron orbital is found by dividing the length of one orbit by the speed of the electron, thus: 2pir/c' = about 1.5 x 10^-17 cm. "The smallest space that we can see is that being produced by electron orbital frequencies." Although space is not produced by a frequency of anything at all, 1.5 x 10^-17 cm is a bit smaller than the smallest space that we can see. "Probably the majority of the space we see is being produced by the spin frequencies of the stars." The Big Bing theory says that stars didn't exist "when time began"; and that "in the first nanosecond" and for zillions more of them, the universe "expanded" into unboundedness. According to that theory, the majority of visible space was produced before stars even existed. Regards anyway, glird
|
Pages: 1 Prev: Does the Lie Product formula work for infinite-dimensional operators? Next: The reality of energy. |