[General] light and particles group

John Macken john at macken.com
Mon Jan 30 12:57:55 PST 2017


Chandra,

 

I am glad to see you designating the energy density of your CTF. You say,
"Some ~94% of the energy of the universe is always held ("kept") as tension
energy in the Complex Tension Field (CTF).The observable energy ~6% (?, as
far as I recall), consisting of both EM waves and particles, are different
forms of excitations of this CTF."  It appears as if you are equating the
energy currently assigned to dark matter and dark energy to instead be the
energy of the CTF. Is this a correct interpretation of your statement?

 

The "critical" density of the universe obtained from the Friedmann equation
of general relativity amounts to about 10-9 J/m3 when converted to energy
density.  Since we are using round numbers, it would appear that you are
claiming that the CTF has energy density of about 10-9 J/m3.  Is this
correct?  I read some of your publications including Resonant energy
absorption and the CTF hypothesis and I have not found any model of the CTF
that can be quantified into a specific energy density.  

 

On 1/21/17 you wrote, "I disagree, as of now, that cosmic space is
"space-time" four dimensional. Because, the "running time" is not a
measurable physical parameter of any physical entity that we know of in this
universe. So, I assert that the "running time" cannot be altered by any
physical process."  I do not understand this statement since it is possible
for the physical component of spacetime to have a fundamental frequency
(Planck frequency for example) without implying "running time". 

 

I believe that we agree on several key points, but before I discuss this
further I want to be sure that I understand the properties of the CTF.
Therefore, please answer or reference publications which answer the
following questions:

 

1.	Do you have a quantifiable model of the CTF with a quantifiable
energy density?
2.	Does the CTF have a quantifiable resonance frequency?
3.	Are photons waves which propagate in the CTF? If so, can the energy
density of photons exceed the energy density of the CTF?

 

John M.

 

From: General
[mailto:general-bounces+john=macken.com at lists.natureoflightandparticles.org]
On Behalf Of Roychoudhuri, Chandra
Sent: Sunday, January 29, 2017 8:11 AM
To: ANDREW WORSLEY <member at aworsley.fsnet.co.uk>; Nature of Light and
Particles - General Discussion <general at lists.natureoflightandparticles.org>
Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

Andrew: Basically, I agree with you. 

However, my numbers are a bit different. My postulate is a bit different.
Some ~94% of the energy of the universe is always held ("kept") as tension
energy in the Complex Tension Field (CTF); which helps sustain observable
universe. This observable energy ~6% (?, as far as I recall), consisting of
both EM waves and particles, are different forms of excitations of this CTF.

Chandra.

====================================

 

-----Original Message-----
From: General
[mailto:general-bounces+chandra.roychoudhuri=uconn.edu at lists.natureoflightan
dparticles.org] On Behalf Of ANDREW WORSLEY
Sent: Sunday, January 29, 2017 8:14 AM
To: Nature of Light and Particles - General Discussion; phys at a-giese.de
<mailto:phys at a-giese.de> 
Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

Hi Chip,

 

Here's the thing space has energy and turn momentum and if you like
effective mass

 

In actual fact 70% of the energy of the Universe is in "empty" space,
otherwise know as dark energy..

 

 

Andrew

 

 

========================================

Message Received: Jan 24 2017, 10:42 PM

From: "Chip Akins" 

To:  <mailto:phys at a-giese.de> phys at a-giese.de, "'Nature of Light and
Particles - General Discussion'" 

Cc: 

Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

Hi Albrecht

 

 

 

Thank you for the pilot wave reference. But of course if a particle is a
wave then it would not need the same sort of treatment.

 

 

 

I thought you might like that approach due to your model. 

 

 

 

But the personal struggle I have with your model is simply that it does not
tell us what particles are, and my quest is to understand specifically that.

 

 

 

Warm Regards

 

 

 

Chip

 

 

 

From: General

[mailto:general-bounces+chipakins=gmail.com at lists.natureoflightandparticles.

org] On Behalf Of Albrecht

Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2017 4:34 PM

To: Nature of Light and Particles - General Discussion

 

Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

 

 

Hi Chip, hi all,

 

regarding the ongoing confusion about the "wave structure" of particles I
would like to remind you all of the approach of Louis de Broglie to this
problem. In his view a particle is a bullet surrounded by a "pilot wave"

which accompanies this bullet and guides it. - This approach was once
strictly rejected by Heisenberg. But John Bell writes in his famous book
"Speakable and Unspeakable in Quantum Mechanics" that he has investigated
the discussion about the pilot wave and that he did not find any serious
physical counter-arguments to it. According to him, Heisenberg's activities
against it were nothing else but bashing of de Broglie.

 

I like this approach of de Broglie. I like it particularly because it fits
seamlessly into my model of two orbiting massless sub-particles.

 

Albrecht

 

 

Am 24.01.2017 um 12:35 schrieb Chip Akins:

 

Hi Chandra

 

 

 

Yes. Momentum is measured as you indicated.

 

 

 

But if the electron is a circulating "wave structure", and has the property
of inertial mass, then momentum is likely an inherent part of the "wave"

itself. 

 

 

 

As we have discovered, the inherent momentum of the confined wave can cause
the property if inertial mass, which further clearly illustrates why E=mc^2.

 

 

 

But since space is massless, there must be a mechanism which creates
momentum for these waves, which is different from the way longitudinal
momentum is carried by a wave in a material medium made of particles of
mass.

 

 

 

This more fundamental form of momentum must be created without using mass,
since no mass is present in "empty" space.

 

 

 

So if this is how things work then we may have the most fundamental form of
energy = differential displacement of space.

 

And now perhaps we have the most fundamental form of momentum = delta Fc

sine(theta) t = E/c.

 

If this is true then delta Fc/Fc = pi, simply because that is the only form
which yields the correct momentum of such a wave.

 

 

 

Chip

 

 

 

From: General

[mailto:general-bounces+chipakins=gmail.com at lists.natureoflightandparticles.

org] On Behalf Of Roychoudhuri, Chandra

Sent: Monday, January 23, 2017 1:10 PM

To: Nature of Light and Particles - General Discussion

 

 

Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

 

 

Chip: I like your thinking approach. 

 

Measurable "momentum" arises through energy exchange between scattering
entities; specifically, when one of the entity possess the "inertial
property", we call particles. And, Newton correctly postulated that they
tend to stay "inertial", "until acted upon by a force" (an entity that can
"donate" energy to create kinetic motion).

 

Chandra.

 

 

 

From: General

[mailto:general-bounces+chandra.roychoudhuri=uconn.edu at lists.natureoflightan

dparticles.org] On Behalf Of Chip Akins

Sent: Monday, January 23, 2017 9:28 AM

To: 'Nature of Light and Particles - General Discussion'

Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

 

 

Hi Dr. Grahame Blackwell

 

 

 

What I was considering is trying to understand the mechanism for momentum in
the propagation of energy in space. Whether that energy is in the form of
light or confined in particles of matter. For if we can show exactly how it
is that momentum is a fundamental feature of energy, as it moves in space,
we then have specifically identified and understood the source for inertial
mass. 

 

 

 

This may help us refine our models. I think that it will help us understand
Planck's quantization of action and its causes as well. This research has
already helped me understand how light can have both spin and orbital
angular momentum, and it may well lead to a better grasp of other basic
principles.

 

 

 

Other reasons for looking into this in detail, are to better understand the
correct set of wave equations, and spin. To understand the causes for what
we observe. 

 

 

 

I agree that a transfer of energy must implicitly also transfer momentum.

Momentum is a measureable result of energy. 

 

But to me E=hf means that more energetic waves or particles are smaller. If
that is correct then there is a cause. Probably the simplest explanation is
that space has an inherent opposition to displacement, which creates this
force Fc I have been discussing. That is nice, simply because this force is
also perfectly suited to cause confinement, not only of waves in space, but
also of elementary fermions. 

 

 

 

So if we can explore this possibility further, and create wave equations for
waves which would be caused by the displacement and this opposing force,
complete with momentum and all the other measurables, then we may have
foundations upon which we can model everything.

 

 

 

I do not think that wave interference is sufficient to cause confinement. I
have studied waves in great detail and still find that more than
self-interference is required for confinement of waves into soliton
(circularly or spherically confined) solutions. So for me, it seems that
this equal and opposite reaction of space to the displacement caused by
energy is the only logical path to explore.

 

 

 

It is my hope (and intuition) that this path will lead to understanding the
mass formation thresholds for electrons so that we might know why the
electron's rest mass is the specific value we measure.

 

 

 

 

 

Chip

 

 

 

From: General

[mailto:general-bounces+chipakins=gmail.com at lists.natureoflightandparticles.

org] On Behalf Of Dr Grahame Blackwell

Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2017 5:40 PM

To: 'Nature of Light and Particles - General Discussion'

> 

Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

 

 

Hi Chip,

 

 

 

I got a working copy, thanks.

 

 

 

I see that of course you're going into far more intricate details
mathematically than I was looking at. In this case, it seems to me, the
question becomes: "How is it that a photon travels through space?". As I've
said, once that's tied down the fact that it carries momentum follows as a
natural consequence.

 

(To some extent it depends on how one defines momentum.)

 

 

 

Thanks again,

 

Grahame

 

----- Original Message ----- 

 

From: Chip Akins  

 

To: 'Nature of Light and Particles - General Discussion'

 

 

Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2017 10:54 PM

 

Subject: Re: [General] light and particles group

 

 

 

Once more.

 

 

 

Chip

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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