nalxhal Posted December 16, 2007 Posted December 16, 2007 (edited) Definition of unified field : In Stefan-Boltzman temperature the length of Wien is 20% of observed (greek l) .Also exist light 20% to blue than Wien length (lc). analogies of two radiations greekl/lc=2pi , Stefan-Boltzman temperature/Plank temperature = 5 Background temperature of universe , Stefan-Boltzman 13,52K = 5xPlank temperature two dimension of time and unified theory In my papers of unified field theory we do not find the two dimensions of time as we discribe in my phylosophy book . But the two forms of wien law give us the hope to indroduce relativity and numbers of freedom in wave function of plank or Maxwel-Boltzman . Also Stefan-Boltzman law will be transformed as we can see in first paper .Stefan-Boltzman law is arised in paper first in a few funnctions from hypotheses .The space of unified field is logarithmic and it could be explained by two dimension of time E-MAIL : REMOVED Edited June 28, 2011 by Klaynos Links from new members are discouraged.
Martin Posted December 16, 2007 Posted December 16, 2007 Nikos, please learn to use math notation to write Greek Lambda or lambda put the expressions [meth] and [/meth] around it------but replace e by a, so it says math and /math [meth]\lambda[/meth] but replace the e by a. [math]\lambda[/math] To see how I have written this, press quote---the quote button at the lower right corner of this post, or any other post. You can write all the physics formulas with this notation, it is calle LaTex To write superscripts and subscripts, [meth]\lambda^2[/meth] [math]\lambda^2[/math] [meth]\lambda_{Wien}[/meth] [math]\lambda_{Wien}[/math] ============================== It may be necessary to move your post to a different forum called Speculation. don't be surprised if this happens. It might not mean your physics is wrong, but could only be individualistic, or original (different from usual professional physics). But first please write what you have to say using LaTex math notation, that I showed you. right now i cannot see clearly what you are trying to say. I know Wien's law. I think you are talking about the Wien wavelength corresponding to a given temperature, but i cannot be sure what you mean unless you write understandably.
alan2here Posted December 16, 2007 Posted December 16, 2007 What does [math]\lambda[/math] mean in maths\science? Iv'e seen it before.
swansont Posted December 16, 2007 Posted December 16, 2007 What does [math]\lambda[/math] mean in maths\science? Iv'e seen it before. Wavelength, mean free path, decay constant in physics Eigenvalue in linear algebra. I'm sure there are other uses. [pause to Google] yes, there are http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambda
nalxhal Posted December 17, 2007 Author Posted December 17, 2007 λ is a symbol for wave length different of wave length lc and λ/lc=2π you must read the pdf
swansont Posted December 17, 2007 Posted December 17, 2007 Linking to a pdf does not really foster discussion very well. Moved to speculations.
bombus Posted December 18, 2007 Posted December 18, 2007 Err, I thought the term refers to a unified field-theory, as opposed to un-unified field-theories (which we currently have). I don't think there's a unified field. It's just the field that reality exists in. It's kinda another name for the ether (although not exactly the same).
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