scifimath
Senior Members-
Posts
128 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Everything posted by scifimath
-
Does anyone here have an account on newscientist.com?
scifimath replied to scifimath's topic in Speculations
This isn't the only site I post to. -
My theories that Strange keeps locking may be vindicated ..and stolen at the same time. https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg24332440-600-quantum-weirdness-isnt-real-weve-just-got-space-and-time-all-wrong/
-
Time doesn't pass in a black hole (past the event horizon) because unobserved quantum waves don't use time. If unobserved quantum waves don't use time, is it a safe bet they are using frequency instead? The quantum field is usually intermixed with spacetime, but apparently it doesn't always have to be.
-
a picture of what was around it. get real
- 11 replies
-
-2
-
Black holes, Dark Matter, and Dark Energy are in the same family. They are not on our team if the only way you can tell they are there are indirect means.
-
It's unobservable like a black hole is unobservable.
-
"Dark" implies something is unobservable. So that's what Dark Matter/Energy are. Dark Energy is the unobservable quantum field. Quantum objects don't use spacetime, but spacetime's gravity can bend the fabric of the quantum field. Dark Matter is matter that normally would convert over to spacetime naturally but doesn't. It's found in abundance as halos around galaxies. Which leads me to believe it's a substance that held together galaxies before spacetime was turned on.
-
You have a double slit with opposite linear polarizers at each slit. You get an observed clump. You then add a 45 degree polarizer and the fringes come back. It's not because the which way information is getting erased. It's because the particle starts a new life when passing through multiple filters. The state of a particle is predetermined based on the path it will fly through. But something interesting happens with you place multiple detectors. The particles state is reassessed while passing through a polarizer. If it sees another polarizer in its path it's going to cycle back to being a wave. Atoms normally shake around with thermal energy ..but not as much as quantum uncertainty makes them appear to be doing. The Uncertainty Principle is a side effect from repeated requests to make the QM object real/physical. It's a delay/smear from the system not being able to process quick enough. Swapping from wave to particle is apparently taxing, especially if it has to do it to each observed event (frame/timeline), for momentum tests. A simple double slit example shows us that a particle can be requested to decohere and remain decohered until it hits the final screen. An Uncertainty Principle test requires several requests of decoherence to get the momentum. What's newly discovered is that each request is causing the particle to cycle from wave to particle, setting fuzziness because it wasn't fast enough to do the swap.
-
That's not what I asked for you don't have experimental results What you have, is what was drilled into your head to never question.
- 102 replies
-
-4
-
I've spent years compiling this theory, you don't get to shrug it off as if it's nothing.
- 102 replies
-
-3