X-Message-Number: 20771 From: Date: Thu, 2 Jan 2003 12:09:03 EST Subject: Re: CryoNet #20766 Sugra --part1_150.19a32724.2b45cc2f_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit From Robert Ettinger; > > One thing stands out, if I have guessed correctly. You seem to be saying, > among other things, that time travel is not a physical possibility but only > > the misapplication to physics of a mathematical structure which is only > partly relevant to physics. (A vague partial analogy might be Newton's law > of > gravitation, which implies falsely that particles can be arbitrarily close > together and hence have unlimited gravitational forces between them.) > I think your guess is quite correct. Well, what I said is my opinion, and when you have 5 indice objects with 1024 coordinates or 13 indice with something as 64 millions coordinates, there is a lot of guessing. It is a tribute to Ricci, the inventor of absolute differential calculus, that we can understand something to a law working with that number of parameters. > I'm glad you have this (and other thoughts) on the record, so maybe some day > > you will at least get a little credit if you turn out to be right, but I do > > wish you would consider trying for professional publicaton. > > the motive to publish that here are numerous: It's a lottry: If I turn out to be right, put on ice and with no sufficient money to be reanimated, someone could be interested to live again a pioneer in a science field. I think my way to see the world is uncommon, someday, it may be interesting for someone to see that at such an epoch someone had that ideas. Some ideas could be taken up in the science community, the down graded version put here could recruit a writer... Anyone interested yet? I have some ideas about potential applications. Some seems strange, even for me, they need that basic theory to be justified. Just a taste about one: The molecular Van der Waals electrical force (a kind of chemical force) is here the local effect of a non-local electromagnetic field. The nuclear force is the same for the color field. The idea: move from Van der Waals to non-local field and then back to local ones. In the second step, nothing can select for electromagnetism U(1) symetry, so a part of the returned local field must be SU(3) color. Put simply, weak (Van der Waals) chemical reactions could be used to act on nuclear structures. Some proteins have long range Van der Waals interactions, they could induce long range nuclear force, that is (relatively) low temp. fusion for example. A protein-like molecule, with high fusion fuel content could be fired by a low energy "particle accelerator" to a target and start a fusion reaction. Muons can produce fusions even in liquid hydrogen, this is the true cold fusion. Unfortunately, they disintegrate before they have released as much energy to pay for their creation. Using a protein-like target would minimise the time a muon is used for a fusion, so it could catalyse more of them and get the break even energy threshold. There is the potential for a full domain of "nuclear force chemistry". Would you call it alchemy? :-) Yvan Bozzonetti. --part1_150.19a32724.2b45cc2f_boundary Content-Type: text/html; charset="US-ASCII" [ AUTOMATICALLY SKIPPING HTML ENCODING! ] Rate This Message: http://www.cryonet.org/cgi-bin/rate.cgi?msg=20771