Basically orbital systems are perceived as unitary objects much like an atom (with all of it's orbiting electrons) is a fundamental unitary element.
Er. No it isn't.
Basically orbital systems are perceived as unitary objects much like an atom (with all of it's orbiting electrons) is a fundamental unitary element.
By finding a relation between Jupiter and an electron, even if it sounds crazy, is a direct link between mass and charge...the holy grail of physics.
Jesus Christ! Scale values don't have units! If you watched the video...and hear it...you'd know I said "scale".
Erm. Why the mass of Jupter in kg?You do realise that the kg is a unit of human conveinience right? And thus of no fundamental significance to physics whatsoever.
We are our own worst enemy. Why? Everything we touch, ends up damaged or killed including our neighbors. We've been like a virus on this planet and most certainly would be one in the Universe.
As symmetrically elegant as the Lorentz equations are, they have one significant problem, velocity of an object can be greater than c as seen by an observer from a stationary location and it has been postulated in this collective theory that an object traveling near c would appear to the stationary observer to be reduced in scale by a factor of S=c^?.
So if I put two Jupiter's together they would also repel each other.
<snip>
Objects of similar size and density would repel each other and object of significantly different size and density would attract each other.
Yes we are (now that we have poked fun at the crackpot physics site that you pointed us to).
It is more exact to say that string theory is nice mathematical framework for what may be the next step in physics. It has produced a large body of interesting mathematics. Its problem is that is has not (yet) produced testable and falsifiable predictions. It may or may not produce results in the future. The fact that the many theories in the "string theory" umbrella has have produced results in the last 40 years does not mean anything.
If you have a figure for the length of time that a theory should be developed without predictable results before being discarded then perhaps you should enlighten us.
Dr. Lee Smolin's opinion is just that - an opinion. "stagnated a generation of physicists" is definitely wrong and possibly a misquote since the number of string theorists is a small faction of the number pf physicists working in the last 40 years.
He's right about scale. It doesn't have to be kg or ounces. Scale is the relative difference. If you compare Jupiter to the sun you get the same answer in either kg or ounces.
@MainframeX
I have issues with string theory myself and Lee Smolin's articulated it quiet well. I have just as many issues with the way many anti-string theorist rail against it. sol invictus was technically correct in the OP quote. Quote selections from Lee Smolin's can be selectively used as debate fodder in a string theory sling match. However, remember that Smolin's is a string theorist and is not "against" string theory. He spends quiet a bit of time in the first chapter of his book explaining this. By no means would I suggest a wholesale abandonment of everything string theorist have contributed.
For these reasons I am slow to consider jumping on your wagon and discussing issues with string theory without knowing more about your reasoning. Since you did plug your theory in the OP it is perfectly legitimate for me to go there for clues to your perspective, and take issue with it here.
I was willing to download the eBooks but... uh.. never mind. So I watched the video and went over the flash version. The superfluous content did not make it any easier, such as pg. 58:
I'm not sure how that relates to a theory of any kind.
Then there are straight up misquoted empirical details like pg. 79:
I couldn't read the exponent. This is exactly the opposite of what Relativity says. No observer of any kind can observe anything moving faster than the speed of light. There is even an addition of velocities equation that explains this. For instance suppose your sitting in ship A. Ship B and C are moving away from you in the same direction. You see B moving away from you at 160,000 km/sec. The captain of ship B sees C moving away from B at 160,000 km/sec. Under Relativity that means C is moving away from you at 250,000 km/sec.
You--------------------B-----------------------C
^---160,000 km/sec--> ^---160,000 km/sec--> ^
^---------------250,000 km/sec--------------> ^
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Velocity-addition_formula
I don't even want to know what you meant by quoting the myth of the "stationary observer". You state that your density operators are not necessarily in contradiction with General Relativity (GR). Yet do you have a clue how the curvature of space, as defined by GR, relates to density operators?
I prefer direct points rather than argue esoteric concepts that may or may not be relevant to the central thesis. This was provided in your youtube video when I caught a statement that cuts the the heart of your theories claim (video ucRuZ9lKM0s at time stamp 5:35):
Ever heard of the Eotvos experiment? In fact every laboratory level experiment I have any knowledge of to measure the Gravitation constant used essentially identical masses. They do not repel. It is such a fundamental empirical fact (not theory) that this claims exceeds all bounds of credulity. In fact this irrevocably breaks your theory. I therefore submit that my reticence toward discussing string theory issues is well founded.
So what if I choose to measure the mass of Jupiter in ounces?
Er. No it isn't.
If you have a figure for the length of time that a theory should be developed without predictable results before being discarded then perhaps you should enlighten us.
S is a scale value and scale doesn't have units. It's the scale difference between a Beryllium atom and the solar system...there's no magic it's that simple or perhaps it's too complicated for you. The math involved is soo elementary that you'd have to be pretty simple minded not to understand it.
By finding a relation between Jupiter and an electron, even if it sounds crazy, is a direct link between mass and charge...the holy grail of physics.
No I don't have a length of time that a theory should be developed without predictable results before it gets exuberant media attention than joe blow's theory and is preferred by mainstream science as an acceptable field of research over other "crackpots". That is actually a good question to ask me since I am denouncing string theory. Honestly. What is an acceptable time limit? 10, 20, 30, 40 years? ... An average person's life span? Do the originators of string theory have to die in order for it to be testable? How about the whole generation of string theorists? Or do they have to pass away in order for science to progress in a much more fruitful direction ... say quantum gravity theory. My beef is that if all the wonderful brainpower of our smartest scientists were released in a different direction (away from string theory) with acceptance from mainstream science (not giving preference to string theory's further continuation in the form of institutional funding and even private industry) then perhaps the wonders of the universe would have been better revealed. So many of our brightest minds are being limited due to fear of being ostracized by mainstream science because they're livelihoods depend on them being accepted. That's a biasness that cannot be tolerated in science but it is human nature and an unfortunate fact though it is a great pity.
Nice of you to mention a field of science that actually took seventy years before parts of it were verified/falsified. The Bose-Einstein condensate was predicted by Bose and Einstein in the 1920s. The problem being that no one produced a condensate until seventies years later. Be patient because time is not historically represenative of a theory being crap or not.No I don't have a length of time that a theory should be developed without predictable results before it gets exuberant media attention than joe blow's theory and is preferred by mainstream science as an acceptable field of research over other "crackpots". That is actually a good question to ask me since I am denouncing string theory. Honestly. What is an acceptable time limit? 10, 20, 30, 40 years? ... An average person's life span? Do the originators of string theory have to die in order for it to be testable? How about the whole generation of string theorists? Or do they have to pass away in order for science to progress in a much more fruitful direction ... say quantum gravity theory.
No. Crackpot has a specific meaning especially in this forum. It is not a person who appears "to be outside the norm". It is a person whose ideas are easily demonstrated to be incorrect. This is the case with the author of the web site that you sited.I think all physicists are crackpots...I know a lot of them. Especially those that decide to support string theory which included me actually. The term "crackpot" is scapegoat-generalizing terminology and used loosely in order to classify anyone generally if they "appear" to be outside the norm even if the claim is very elementary a 12 year old can understand it. Dr Smolin (quantum gravity theory) is therefore a crackpot and especially so is Dr. Kaku (books like "Physics of the Impossible") with their own sites to boot. To be "crackish" you have to be an individual who is unwilling to change his opinion on his own theories or modify them even if overwhelming evidence and logical reasoning is given to the contrary. Does that include everyone who blindly believes in string theory where the most overwhelming evidence countering string theory is its own 40s years of untestable existence. Trust me, I'm easily swayed if the reasoning is good. Fortunately Canadians are a little more intelligent and reserved in the use of the term "crackpot".
The truth is 40s years of unsupported testable physics is a huge farce and a pity many of you have been brainwashed to it, but I know its allure. It, just like Mr Witt's book, has been promoted extensively sparked in the 80s by the media before it had any testable and verified merit. You should never go the media before you can test your theory right? Wrong! You decide. The math in string theory may have been inspirational to mathematicians but not physicists. It's coupling is absolutely imaginary in order to tie together independent verified physics theories but yet it doesn't explain forces (any of them) what they really are. Instead it a maps them geometrically. An analogy is like asking someone to fuse together 5 lead blocks. So he sets out and builds a geometric contraption (rig) made of iron and inserts the lead blocks and calls that fusing but what he should have done was melt the lead blocks for form one uniform big lead block. The individual in this analogy missed the fact that lead can be melted a key component to fusing. It's like screwing metal rods together instead of welding them and then forming a car from it and calling it safe. It's like the gentleman who's been building a flying car for the last 20 years (who's been in popsci numerous times) claiming the flying car is finished but hasn't had a successful test flight in 20 years...does he really have a flying car? No if it doesn't fully work.
You guys are fun.
Anyway that's my take.
Sorry you're misinterpreting the Eotvos experiment completely. That's a test for inertial mass vs gravitational mass. All gravity experiments are variations of the Cavendish experiment that uses a small lead sphere with another much bigger lead sphere. All Cavendish type experiments are the same in structure. The big sphere is used because its gravitation force (acceleration) is stronger and results in better experimentation. This does contradict the current norm, but is exact as it pertains to wave theory and my theory that all matter vibrates space-time thus two exact matter objects produce the same vibrations that cancel (total destructive interference) each other out resulting in repulsion. Object of different size (same material) attract because their vibration of space-time results in constructive interference (just like static charge).
My relativity theory is very, very close to that of Einstein's but considers space-time as a "distortable" aether substance. As A moves away from B, A's velocity increases via acceleration and acceleration (in my theory) distorts space-time making it denser for A (more kinetic energy) as opposed to it's own previous velocity in relation to space-time aether and point B. It's a slight modification with big ramifications.
Duh.. That's what I get after being up all night, but it changes nothing. If mass, even by an extremely tiny amount, repelled when equal it would be unmistakable in either the Eotvos or Cavendish experiments. It would also throw off all our orbital calculations in the solar system.
I'll put it this way:
1) Your claim if true is an essentially guaranteed Nobel Prize (even, or especially, without the theory).
2) You claim can be trivially validated for less than $10 (or a junk pile).
3) Your claim is absolutely absurd!!!!
So prove me wrong and do this experiment.
Just use the same brick weights on the foam also, as I did years ago.
So what are you waiting on? With some scraps from a junk pile you can be nearly guaranteed a Nobel prize and as much money as Randi is offering tax free.
If equal masses repel then presumably as the difference increased it would repel less and less until it started attracting, then it would attract more and more as the difference increased. This means the Gravitational constant cannot be constant. So tell me what the mass ratio must be for the attraction and repulsion to cancel? What you are saying is that 3 marbles of equal mass will repel, yet if you put 2 of the marbles next to each other they will attract the 3rd. Hogwash. The claim that your theory is close to Relativity is also hogwash, but given your claims it appears your understanding breaks down even at the pre-math level. I therefore despair of offering proof other than the experiment itself.
He's right about scale. It doesn't have to be kg or ounces. Scale is the relative difference. If you compare Jupiter to the sun you get the same answer in either kg or ounces.
Coulomb is a Metric unit just like Kilogram and they are both unitarily symmetrical due to the Metric System which the Empiral system lacks.
Really?
No. Crackpot has a specific meaning especially in this forum. It is not a person who appears "to be outside the norm". It is a person whose ideas are easily demonstrated to be incorrect. This is the case with the author of the web site that you sited.
"Dr Smolin (quantum gravity theory) is therefore a crackpot" is wrong. He is a well respected mathematical physicist. He does have some controversial opinions but that is part of scientific debate.
Please do not refer to "Mr Witt's book" as this suggests that you are easily influenced by the pretty pictures and big words in it. I assume that you have already wasted your money by buying it.
Once again you should read these web pages reviewing "Our Undiscovered Universe , Introducing Null Physics, The Science of Uniform and Unconditional Reality" by Terence Witt:
From Ben Benjamin Monreal (a professional physicist):
http://web.mit.edu/~bmonreal/www/Null_Physics_Review.html
From me (an amateur physicist):
http://homepages.ihug.co.nz/~fiski/ouu_review.html
And a few of the many flaws on the book:
- Redefining the concept of infinity as a length with magnitude.
- Defining a line as a series of points written as zeros and separated by plus signs, treating them as numbers so that they add up to zero and then treating the number zero as a point again!
- A really bad atomic model "proving" that a electron orbiting a proton has a ground state that it cannot decay from by creating a new physical law.
- Using the high school description of a neutron as a proton plus an electron and not realizing that this is just his atomic model!
- Postulating that galaxies have "galactic cores" which are super massive objects that are not quite black holes and not realizing that the centre of the Milky Way is well observed. These recycle stars into hydrogen. Oddly enough astronomers have not noticed dozens of stars vanishing from the galactic centre in the many images that they have taken over the last few decades.