Forum Replies Created

  • James

    Member
    January 2, 2021 at 10:21 pm

    As I understand Maxlow’s presentation, he looks to protons, electrons, etc, arriving at Earth to account for the increased mass/size of the planet. Yet, when asked in his recent presentation on CNPS, Maxlow said that he has not yet calculated if the mass of these incoming particles is sufficient to account for the Earth size expansion he describes. Fair enough.

    In this context, my binary mechanics (BM) work provides a perhaps more significant support for Maxlow’s increased-mass hypothesis, namely baryogenesis (formation of protons from energy quanta), which appears to occur abundantly at rather low energy density levels. An advantage of this account is that _all energy_ (e.g., EM radiation from the sun) arriving at Earth provides a much greater supply of energy quanta (a BM-defined term) for baryogenesis to increase Earth mass during its expansion as described by Maxlow.

  • James

    Member
    November 14, 2020 at 6:25 pm

    Can you clarify what “apparently empty space” means? Perhaps this breaks down to (1) space definition, hopefully not with the legacy continuous space-time theory, and (2) what is not present in the space to qualify it as “empty”.

  • James

    Member
    December 18, 2021 at 11:58 am

    Your description “collection of ideas” indicates to me that this concept is only vaguely defined in conventional sources. In contrast, binary mechanics provides a concise mathematical framework to address all the issues in the “collection”. For example, “zero-point energy” might be the lowest energy state at zero degrees Kelvin, where particles may be defined precisely without any particle motion or EM radiation present. This advantage of binary mechanics allowed the first-ever particle definitions only possible at this “zero-point”, independent of particle motion and EM effects above zero Kelvin. Notice that the plot thickens (or is further clarified) at zero Kelvin, since the quanta (1-state bits) continue to change location as they cycle through their proton and electron bit cycles. Binary mechanics software, known as “bit function analysis” and a free download, allows exact analysis of these states — a valuable resource to all fundamental physics investigators.

  • James

    Member
    November 15, 2020 at 10:22 pm

    Perhaps you might agree that “black matter” can be defined as matter in the ground state (not emitting light). I go further in showing that perfect vacuum (no matter = atoms, ions) is teaming with energy quanta. http://www.binary-mechanics.com/2019/12/vacuum-composition.html