From: Archimedes Plutonium on
The below is a diversion in this chapter about how the Kelvin scale is
special.
But the most important aspect of this chapter is that it is the single
most
key evidence to date that the Universe is not a Big Bang origin but a
Atom
Totality origin. At first, in history, when the CMBR came in, it was
the leading
piece of evidence that the Big Bang relied upon and trashcanned the
Steady State theory.
But once the CMBR was recognized to be blackbody radiation, (anyone
know the dates
involved?), once it was recognized to be blackbody radiation, that
instantly the Big
Bang theory was trashcanned, and even if there was no Atom Totality
theory around when
it was known to be blackbody, the Big Bang could not and could never
be acceptable
with a blackbody CMBR. A blackbody CMBR means the Universe is a
structure of precision
detail that could not have come about via an explosion. Blackbody
radiation means the Universe slowly was formed via Dirac new
radioactivities.

---------
And it is plain to see how and why Kelvin temperature is very special
of a temperature scale
because it not only fixes 0 but fixes "1" degree Kelvin to the
physics
of electron shells of atoms. The Rankine scale does not fix "1"


In fact, as we become more knowledgeable of the blackbody cavity
radiation of electrons
of elements in the Periodic Table of elements we will see that the
5f6
of plutonium must be
identical in numeric value to that of the number "e" in mathematics
of
2.71.... as it relates
to that of pi at 3.14..... So, in other words, where mathematics
conjoins with physics and where physics defines the ultimate meaning
of why pi and "e" have the numeric value that
they possess. So that if the Universe were a single atom of say lead
or of say antimony
or of say radon, that the numeric value in mathematics of the
numbers
pi and "e" would be
different from what they are known to be at present in our Universe.


Date: Sat, 08 Sep 2007 09:22:44 -0700
Subject: #21B with #28y why Kelvin is special; how DeBroglie's book
would get 1 degree K for electron or proton cavity Re: ATOM TOTALITY
(Atom Universe) THEORY REPLACES BIG BANG THEORY IN PHYSICS


21August 2007 in this book thread listed as #21 I wrote about
DeBroglie's
inside the atom blackbody cavities. It is worth repeating here
because
I am going to revise my previous stance. And perhaps this cosmic
blackbody
radiation is enough proof that the Cosmos is one big atom of
plutonium.


I need to find out the most precise blackbody Temperature of the
Cosmic
Microwave Background Radiation. Back in the 1990s that number figure
was 2.735 + 0.06 K.


What I am thinking is that if the Kelvin temperature of the proton
cavity
or collapsed wavefunction of a isolated electron cavity is that of
e^0
which yields a Kelvin temperature of 1 degree. I am thinking that
these
electron cavities as we move from Hydrogen atom all the way up to
Plutonium atom that the cavities have enough variance that we can
verify the Cosmos temperature is a atom of a plutonium blackbody
cavity.


So I need to find out what our present day "best Kelvin temperature"
is. In the 1990s the best we could do was 2.735 + 0.06 K.


The book LA THERMODYNAMIQUE DE LA PARTICULE ISOLEE
(OU THERMODYNAMIQUE CACHEE DES PARTICULES)
(btw, I like that title with the word "cachee"
and obviously this book is written in French and it is
one of the
greatest books ever written. It is truly amazing of
the dazzling genius
of Debroglie to have anticipated so much in advance)
written by
Debroglie, 1964, considers the relativistic
fluctuations of mass of
subatomic particles such as the protons, electrons.
And then associates
temperature with a relativistic statistical mechanic.


 I am following Debroglie's intuition, except
replacing relativistic
mass fluctuations with statistical quantum
fluctuations of the Coulomb
interactions for a plutonium atom in order to derive
an intrinsic
associated temperature for an electron cavity, which
is simply the
space occupied by an electron of 231 plutonium atom.
   Let me use 95!/2 or either 232!/2 as the "Coulombic
states" and with
this large number of statistical interactions, I
propose to find an
intrinsic temperature for the 94th electron of an
isolated plutonium
atom.
  From pages 94-101, Debroglie  works with the formula
1/T = dS/dL
where T is temperature, dS is the derivative of
entropy with respect to
the lagrangian L which is kinetic energy of a system
minus the
potential energy of that system.  Debroglie derives
the formula m_0cc =
kT_0 , then where M_0 is proportional to the factor
e^(S/k)  as M_0 =
m_0  thus the entropy is proportional to the Boltzmann
factor
e^(-M_0/m_0), thence 1/T = e^(-M_0/m_0)/ d L.  Now
taking the idea of a
neutron of a neptunium atom radioactively growing to
transform into a
plutonium atom in which the term d L is very close to
1 by the factor
(neutron/neutron) -  ((proton + electron)/neutron).
So 1/T =
e^(-188/186) K/1 which is 1/T = 1/e^(188/186) K.   So
the thermodynamic
of the isolated plutonium atom or the blackbody
temperature of a
plutonium atom is  e^188/186 K which is the value of
2.74 degrees
Kelvin.   The presently determined value by the COBE
satellite for the
cosmic background microwave temperature of the
observable universe is
2.735 + 0.06 K. I assert that it is not coincidence
that the value for
the cosmic background microwave radiation temperature
of 2.7 is close
to the value of the number e in maths.


Archimedes Plutonium
http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium/
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies