[MD] Quantum computing
Ron Kulp
RKulp at ebwalshinc.com
Wed Feb 21 05:49:31 PST 2007
[Magnus]
For example, nobody seems to really know what gravity is. But I have a
nagging feeling that the reason nobody knows is that they are all stuck
in the SOM system of thought.
Any physicists here? Ron? Your comments about geometry hinted at a
scientific vein, perhaps physics as well?
[x]
I'm not a physicist but I can tell you what I do know and it is
theorized just how you predicted, in quantum terms.
Einstein postulated that space can be warped, he rationlized this by
observing the solar system by newtons laws
And realized it Could not work as it does, by newtons laws the same
gravitational force which keeps say saturn in orbit
Would therefore draw closer planetary bodies into the sun by it's
proximety therefore it could'nt possibly be
A gravitatioal "force" pulling on these bodies or half the solar system
would have been sucked into the sun.
He thought space was made of something not a vacuume and that gravity is
more like the surface tension of water
The larger and denser the mass the more space is warped and displaced.
This theory was realized quite by accident
During tests in a super collider scientists kept finding quantum "dots"
in their data they theorized that these
"dots" were the intersecting points of what is called the "quantum
string theory" that space is comprised of
Vibrating loops of energy doing something called quantum jitters.
Meaning that they are there but there're not.
Meaning that space has substance space is comprised of energy and can be
warped. I posted a paper By
Nassim Haramein called "The origin of spin" you might find interesting.
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