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1255 lines
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(word processor parameters LM=8, RM=75, TM=2, BM=2)
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Taken from KeelyNet BBS (214) 324-3501
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Sponsored by Vangard Sciences
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There are ABSOLUTELY NO RESTRICTIONS
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on duplicating, publishing or distributing the
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files on KeelyNet except where noted!
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February 22, 1992
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SWEET1.ASC
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This file shared with KeelyNet courtesy of Guy Resh.
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Hello,
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I just received in ASCII form the two papers by Mr. Tom E. Bearden
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which appeared in the Proceedings of the 26th Intersociety Energy
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Conversion Engineering Conference, August 4-9, 1991, Boston,
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Massachusetts. They can be found in volume 4 in the section
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entitled 'Advanced Energy Concepts'. The titles are :
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"Utilizing Scalar Electromagnetics to Tap Vacuum Energy"
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by Floyd Sweet and Tom E. Bearden (pp. 370-375)
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(listed as SWEET1.ASC on KeelyNet)
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and
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"On a Testable Unification of Electromagnetics,
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General Relativity, and Quantum Mechanics"
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by Tom E. Bearden and Walter Rosenthal (pp. 487-492)
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(listed as SWEET2.ASC on KeelyNet)
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Except for the unsupported conjectures dealing with mind, thought
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and life, which bring his results almost into the metaphysical
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realm, I find these papers to be very intriguing and compelling.
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Thus, with the permission of Mr. Bearden, I am posting them to
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sci.physics and alt.sci.physics.new-theories. (I'll start with the
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paper "On a Testable Unification of Electromagnetics, General
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Relativity, and Quantum Mechanics".)
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As you can see in the "Followup-To:" line, I would like to see
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discussion appear in alt.sci.physics.new-theories, since that is the
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most appropriate place for discussion. If your site does not
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receive a.s.p.n., then let me know, and I can send you summaries of
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whatever discussion follows (hopefully a lot). Of course, if your
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site doesn't receive a.s.p.n, then ask your sysadmin if it would be
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possible to receive it.
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BTW, Mr. Bearden is not (yet) on the net, but he has agreed to let
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me be a go-between, and I'll try to post his comments on whatever
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discussion ensues. I encourage everybody to find Whittaker's two
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papers and Maxwell's original treatise on electromagnetic theory
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(see the papers for the exact citations) and to read them carefully.
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I hope you find these papers as intriguing as I have. If nothing
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else, it will help you to firm up your foundation of physics.
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Page 1
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Please, let's keep an open, yet critical mind, and let's not allow
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the discussion to develop into a flame war.
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Jon Noring
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(As soon as I have time, I'll post Mr. Bearden's other paper. They
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came to me in Word 5.0 format, so I've had to do some editing).
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====================================================================
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| Jon Noring | noring@netcom.netcom.com |"The dogs bark, but|
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| JKN International | IP : 192.100.81.100 | the caravan moves |
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| 1312 Carlton Place| Phone : (510) 294-8153 | caravan moves on."|
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| Livermore,CA 94550| V-Mail: (510) 862-1101 |"Pack your lunch, |
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| | sit in the bushes,|
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| | and watch." |
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====================================================================
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"If you make $50,000 today, you have the same buying power as the
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average coal miner did in 1949, adjusted for taxes and inflation,"
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John Sestina, nationally recognized Certified Financial Planner;
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quoted in 1987.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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[This paper appeared in the 26th IECEC Conference, as past posts
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have mentioned. Posted with the permission of T.E. Bearden. See
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my prior post for more information. J.Noring]
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ON A TESTABLE UNIFICATION OF ELECTROMAGNETICS,
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GENERAL RELATIVITY, AND QUANTUM MECHANICS
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T. E. Bearden
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Association of Distinguished American Scientists
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2311 Big Cove Road
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Huntsville, Alabama 35801
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Walter Rosenthal
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4876 Bethany Lane
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Santa Maria, California 93455
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Abstract
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Unrecognized for what it was, in 1903-1904 E.T. Whittaker (W)
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published a fundamental, engineerable theory of electrogravitation
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(EG) in two profound papers. The first (W-1903) demonstrated a
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hidden bidirectional EM wave structure in the scalar potential of
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vacuum, and showed how to produce a standing scalar EM potential
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wave -- the same wave discovered experimentally four years earlier
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by Nikola Tesla.
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W-1903 is a hidden variable theory that shows how to
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deterministically curve the local and/or distant space-time using
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EM.
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W-1904 shows that all force field EM can be replaced by
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interferometry of two scalar potentials, anticipating the Aharonov-
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Bohm effect by 55 years and extending it to the engineerable
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macroscopic world.
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W-1903 shows how to turn EM into G-potential, curve local and/or
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distant space-time, and directly engineer the virtual particle flux
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of vacuum.
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Page 2
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W-1904 shows how to turn G-potential and curvature of space-time
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back into force-field EM, even at a distance. The papers implement
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Sakharov's 1968 statement that gravitation is not a fundamental
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field of nature, but a conglomerate of other fields. Separately
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applied to electromagnetics (EM), quantum mechanics (QM), and
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general relativity (GR), an extended superset of each results.
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The three supersets are Whittaker-unified, so that a testable,
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engineerable, unified field theory is generated. EM, QM, and GR
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each contained a fundamental error that blocked unification, and
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these three errors are explained. The Schroedinger potential can
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also be structured and altered, indicating the direct engineering of
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physical quantum change.
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Recently Ignatovich has pointed out this hidden bidirectional EM
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wave structure in the Schroedinger potential, without referencing
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Whittaker's 1903 discovery of the basic effect. The potential for
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applying the new approach to explain the nature of mind and thought,
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and providing a laboratory-testable theory for them, is briefly
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noted and indicative major references cited. Some of the possible
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implications for physics and biology are pointed out.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Electromagnetics Has Foundations Difficulties
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There exists today a small but growing number of scientists who have
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become aware that the presently accepted electromagnetic theory is
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seriously flawed. Shortcomings in the theory are readily cited.
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(listed as THEORYBE.ASC on KeelyNet)
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For example, in railgun experiments the Lorentz force law has been
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falsified. It was always an approximation, and does not adequately
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approximate at high energies. [ref. 1]
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Also completely contrary to orthodox EM theory, the EM force fields
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are not primary agents at all, but are effects produced in and on
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the physical system by the potentials. As an example, we cite the
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Aharonov-Bohm (AB) effect, which proves that, even in the total
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absence of the force fields, the potentials remain and can interfere
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at a distance to produce real effects in charged particle systems.
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[ref. 2] The AB effect has been proven to the satisfaction of all
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but the most diehard skeptics. [ref. 3] However, its fundamental
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impact on the basic notions underlying classical EM theory continues
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to be ignored by all but a handful of scientists.
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These EM shortcomings were not present in the original quaternion EM
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theory by James Clerk Maxwell. [ref. 4] Indeed, the original
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Maxwell theory contains many things that were mistakenly eliminated
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from the abbreviated vector theory formulated primarily by Heaviside
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and Gibbs, and to a lesser extent by Hertz. [ref. 5] Further, these
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things that do not exist in conventional EM theory, but that exist
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in Maxwell's actual quaternion theory, can be used in specially
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designed equipment, and the operation of that equipment will be
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inexplicable by present-day electromagnetic theory. AB-effect
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laboratory apparatuses are in fact rigorous demonstrations of such
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a statement.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Scalar Electromagnetics
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This can be even further explained and developed experimentally
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Page 3
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according to Whittaker's fundamental approach. [ref. 6]
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In a modern sense, in 1903/1904 Whittaker theoretically showed how
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to engineer the scalar potential with a highly dynamic, hidden,
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bidirectional EM wave structure, to build hidden EM vacuum engines
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that are still unsuspected in modern physics today. Much of the
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content of the fundamental 1959 Aharonov/Bohm paper was anticipated
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in a different manner, and dramatically extended in an engineerable,
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testable fashion, by Whittaker's two papers. At the time, however,
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the vector
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| phi(x)
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| potential
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| + +
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| + + <---- Organized Local Space-Time
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| + + Curvature
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| + EM +
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| + Substructure +
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| + +
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| + +
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|+_______________________________+_______________________________+
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+ +
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X --> + EM +
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+ Substructure +
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+ +
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+ +
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+ +
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+ +
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Figure 1. A Standing Scalar EM Potential Whittaker Wave.
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interpretation of Maxwell's EM theory was just slowly beginning to
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spread as the adopted model. Also, special and general relativity
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and quantum mechanics had not yet been born. Accordingly,
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considering the scientific understanding of the day, it was not
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possible for any scientist, even Whittaker himself, to perceive the
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potential future impact these fundamental papers could have on
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sciences and technologies not yet even born. Unfortunately, in
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later years Whittaker apparently never realized that his two earlier
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papers had such application to the modern unification problem.
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Indeed, up to the time of Whittaker's death, very few scientists
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even concerned themselves with the notion of unified fields.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Turning EM Energy Into G-Potential Energy
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In his 1903 paper Whittaker showed that a standing scalar potential
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wave can be decomposed into a special set of bidirectional EM waves
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that convolute into a standing scalar potential wave, as shown in
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Figure 1. As a corollary, a set of bidirectional EM waves, stress
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waves, can be constructed to form a standing scalar potential wave
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in space, as shown in Figure 2. Since all potentials represent
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trapped energy density of vacuum, they are gravitational
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[Note, Figure 2 is too complicated to reproduce here in ASCII]
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Page 4
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Figure 2. Whittaker's Bidirectional EM Plane Wave Structure.
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in nature. [ref. 7] Because it represents a "standing wave" whose
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magnitude represents the variation in the local energy density of
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the vacuum, the Whittaker scalar potential wave represents a
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standing wave of variation in the local curvature of vacuum, sharply
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in contradiction to the assumptions of present electromagnetics and
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general relativity. [ref. 8] It also represents a standing wave of
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the variation of the local gauge.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Turning G-Potential Back to EM
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The very next year, Whittaker's second paper (cited above) showed
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how to turn such G-potential wave energy back into EM energy, even
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at a distance, by scalar potential interferometry, anticipating and
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greatly expanding the Aharonov-Bohm effect.
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Indeed, Whittaker's second paper shows that the entire present
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force-field electromagnetics can be directly replaced with scalar
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potential interferometry. In other words, scalar EM includes and
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extends the present restricted vector subset of Maxwell's original
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theory.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Engineering the Nucleus Directly
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Whittaker's work is even more striking when one realizes that
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potentials are actually part of the vacuum itself. They pervade
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through the electron shells of an atom, directly reaching the
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nucleus and centering on it.
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Gross external changes (gradients; force fields) of the potentials
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interact primarily with the electron shells of the atom. The
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stabilized (persistent, gradient-free) potential's primary
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interaction is with the atomic nucleus.
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Specifically, the primary interaction between the infolded,
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internalized EM bidirectional wave structure of a Whittaker
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potential is with the atomic nuclei, rather than with the atom's
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electron shells, because in the standing Whittaker potential wave
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the local magnitude of the external potential is not changing.
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Whittaker has in fact shown that there exists an unsuspected,
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hidden, internal EM energy exchange channel between nuclei, a
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channel where EM energy flows bidirectionally, undetected by most
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modern detectors.
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Unlimited types of Whittaker-structures can be produced in the
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laboratory in the form of deterministically structured potentials;
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for the first time, the direct engineering, structuring, and
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manipulation of the nuclear potentials themselves, even with
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miniscule EM power, is possible. This is a new capability of
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exceptional importance and application.
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The Whittaker structuring in effect allows one to produce a "virtual
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grid" to place in the violent virtual particle flux (VPF) exchange
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of the local vacuum with the nucleus. By simply holding the grid
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signal constant, gradually the nuclear potential itself will
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substructure (activate) with the same structure.
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Page 5
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When the activating ("charging") potential is removed, the
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activation of the nucleus will gradually "decay" back to the normal
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structure. Just as one example, the binding energy of an atomic
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nucleus is accessible and, theoretically, engineerable.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Whittaker Structuring Confirmed
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Recently Ignatovich has pointed out the hidden bidirectional EM wave
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structure in the Schroedinger potential, without referencing
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Whittaker's 1903 discovery of the basic effect. [ref. 9]
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Also, recently modern researchers, working on acoustic missiles and
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with the scalar acoustic wave equation, have "rediscovered"
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Whittaker's 1903 infolded bidirectional planar waves inside the
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scalar wave. [ref. 10] They do not appear to have yet recognized
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its relevance to their work in electromagnetic missiles. [ref. 11]
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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STOCHASTIC ELECTRODYNAMICS
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Whittaker's paper takes on a significant new meaning, however, in
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light of Sakharov's 1968 hypothesis that gravitation is not a
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primary field, but is produced as a result of interactions of other
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fields. Together with Whittaker's structured potential, this
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implies that the gravitational aspects of the nucleus can also be
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electromagnetically engineered.
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As a result of Sakharov's hypothesis, explosive activity in
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stochastic electrodynamics (SED) has shown that many fundamental
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parts of physics are "already unified" in terms of electromagnetics
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and gravitation. Evidence continues to accumulate that the
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gravitational field may not be a primary field of nature, but a
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secondary or residual effect associated with other non-gravitational
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fields.
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[ref. 12] Actually, general relativity has always focused on
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energy as the thing which really has gravitation. Trapped energy,
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such as mass, is particularly important. But since mass is
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essentially trapped EM energy, relativity has essentially assumed
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Sakharov's hypothesis anyway, without stating it so explicitly.
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Further, GR considers "the" G-potential as a conglomerate of other
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things. [ref. 13] It follows that the gradient of that conglomerate
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yields a force field which is also a conglomerate.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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G-Potential is Electromagnetic
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Starting from Sakharov's postulate, to the first order gravitation
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should be due to some aspect of the EM field, since EM is the
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strongest and most universal force normally encountered in the
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macroscopic world experimentally, and since mass is already "trapped
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EM energy." Thus Sakharov focused attention upon the zero-point EM
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energy fluctuations (ZPF) of vacuum.
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Sakharov conjectured that the Lagrange function of the G-field is
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generated by vacuum polarization, due to fermions. [ref. 14] Akama
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et al examined the potential generation of gravity as a collective
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excitation of fermion-antifermion pairs. [ref. 15]
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Haxlacher and Mottolo proved that space-time (ST) curvature can
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Page 6
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arise from the quantum fluctuations of pure gauge fields. [ref. 16]
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Zee showed that gravity is generated as a symmetry-breaking effect
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in quantum field theory in which a dynamical scale-invariance
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breaking is postulated to take place at energies near the Planck
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mass. [ref. 17]
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Amati, Veneziano and Yoshimoto showed that in pre-geometric models
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the Einstein action and metric may be generated from quantum
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fluctuations of matter fields. [ref. 18]
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A review of the exploding field was given by Adler, with particular
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emphasis on the case of renormalizable field theories with dynamical
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scale-invariance breaking, in which the induced gravitational
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effective action is finite and calculable. [ref. 19]
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Puthoff's Important Contribution
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Recently Puthoff has applied the Sakharov viewpoint to significantly
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advance the stochastic electrodynamics field. He has successfully
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explained why the atom's orbital electrons do not decay into the
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nucleus, even though by conventional EM theory each electron must
|
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constantly radiate EM energy, since it is constantly accelerated.
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[ref. 20]
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He has also shown that gravitation can indeed be regarded as an
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induced effect associated with zero-point EM fluctuations of the
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vacuum. [ref. 21] He has also shown a feedback-derivation of the
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source of the vacuum EM zero-point energy fluctuations from quantum
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fluctuation motion of particles driven by the ZPE. [ref. 22]
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Quantum fluctuation motion of particles and vacuum ZPE fluctuations
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are connected by a causal, self-regenerating cosmological feedback
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cycle.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Some Conclusions
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In light of Whittaker's EM structuring of the potential, there are
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several important conclusions to be taken from the important SED
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work since Sakharov's seminal suggestion, as follows:
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(1) In stochastic electrodynamics, very solid theoretical
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foundation exists for electrogravitation.
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(2) The vacuum EM ZPF may be regarded as causally connected to
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quantum mechanical particle jitter (Zitterbewegung motion)
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and vice versa, though the feedback mechanism into the
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virtual particle flux of vacuum is normally hidden by the
|
|
large-scale integration represented by any macroscopic
|
|
object or process.
|
|
(3) The SED theoretical demonstration of this hidden mechanism
|
|
adds new emphasis on the rather neglected hidden variable
|
|
theories.
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(4) In some fashion, statistical quantum change is chaotic
|
|
rather than random, for it has already been shown by
|
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Puthoff that the vacuum ZPF fluctuations driving everything
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are totally deterministic. It follows that, theoretically,
|
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hidden Whittaker order already exists in quantum change,
|
|
and quantum change must be already chaotic and at least
|
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partially deterministic.
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(5) It follows that there may well exist engineerable
|
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mechanisms that can affect or manipulate quantum change.
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Page 7
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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Whittaker Potentials Are Engineerable
|
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|
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What Whittaker has described in his 1903 paper is a standing
|
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electrogravitational wave, a standing wave in the local curvature of
|
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space-time itself, that can readily be constructed experimentally.
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|
|
This Whittaker standing potential wave is precisely the new form of
|
|
standing EM wave that Nikola Tesla had experimentally discovered
|
|
being radiated from a thunderstorm four years earlier, on the night
|
|
of July 3-4, 1899, and which he recorded in his Colorado Springs
|
|
Notebook on the morning of July 4, 1899. [ref. 23]
|
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|
|
Further, Whittaker's paper directly implies that the hidden variable
|
|
determinism shown by Puthoff to be driving the zero-point EM
|
|
fluctuations can also be engineered, both locally and at a distance.
|
|
|
|
In short, Whittaker's 1903 paper shows how to turn electromagnetics
|
|
into gravitational potential. Unknowingly, Whittaker had already
|
|
shown the correct engineering way to unify EM and G fields, and
|
|
already falsified one of Einstein's later primary GR assumptions,
|
|
that the local space-time is never curved, in a testable manner, a
|
|
decade before Einstein published his theory of general relativity.
|
|
|
|
In the very next year, 1904, Whittaker's second paper (orally
|
|
presented in 1903) was published. [ref. 24] In this little-noticed
|
|
paper Whittaker shows that all classical force field
|
|
electromagnetics can be replaced by scalar EM potentials and their
|
|
interferometry.
|
|
|
|
Specifically, any EM force field can be replaced by two scalar
|
|
potential fields and scalar interferometry. The combination of this
|
|
paper and the 1903 Mathematische Annalen paper not only includes the
|
|
Aharonov-Bohm effect, but specifies a testable method for producing
|
|
a macroscopic and controlled Aharanov-Bohm effect, even at large
|
|
distances. [ref. 25]
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
PRESENT ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORY IS INCOMPLETE
|
|
|
|
As stated above, Maxwell's original EM theory was written in
|
|
quaternions, which are an extension to the complex number theory and
|
|
an independent system of mathematics. In short, since the
|
|
quaternion is a hypernumber, Maxwell's theory was a hyperspatial
|
|
theory, not just the limited three-dimensional subset that was
|
|
extracted and expressed by Heaviside and Gibbs in terms of an
|
|
abbreviated, incomplete vector mathematics. [ref. 26]
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Heaviside and Gibbs Curtailed Maxwell's Theory
|
|
|
|
Oliver Heaviside was a brilliant, self-taught genius who never
|
|
formally attained a university degree, and whose papers were printed
|
|
in technical magazines rather than scientific journals. When
|
|
Maxwell published his Treatise in 1873, Heaviside was just teaching
|
|
himself differential equations.
|
|
|
|
Heaviside's imagination was completely seized by Maxwell's book, and
|
|
Maxwell forever became his hero. However, he had great difficulty
|
|
with quaternions and could not completely tolerate them.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Page 8
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Electrogravitation Was Discarded
|
|
|
|
A puzzled Heaviside abhorred the quaternion, since it linked
|
|
together a scalar component and a vector component, or "apples and
|
|
oranges," in his view. He excised the scalar component of the
|
|
quaternion and excluded the hyperspatial characteristics of its
|
|
directional components, producing his much more limited vectors.
|
|
|
|
To unite magnetics and electromagnetics, the simplest complex aspect
|
|
of the quaternion had to be restored by resorting to ordinary
|
|
imaginary numbers. These machinations to the quaternion theory,
|
|
however, discarded its unified field theory aspects.
|
|
|
|
In short, Heaviside produced a very practical, highly restricted
|
|
subset that was far easier to engineer, but he threw out
|
|
electrogravitation in the process.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Hatred of the Potential
|
|
|
|
Heaviside hated the potential because he did not truly understand
|
|
it. He stated that it was "...mystical and should be murdered from
|
|
the theory." He conditioned generations of physicists and engineers
|
|
to erroneously believe that the potential was just a mathematical
|
|
convenience, and had no actual physical realization.
|
|
|
|
Indeed, most electrical physicists and electrical engineers are
|
|
still of that erroneous persuasion today, even though the Aharonov-
|
|
Bohm work has long-since falsified such a position, both
|
|
theoretically and experimentally.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
The Quaternion Theory Was Already a Unified EM/G Theory
|
|
|
|
The present author has previously pointed out that Maxwell's
|
|
quaternion theory was in fact a unified theory of electromagnetics
|
|
and gravitation, and that the scalar component of the quaternion was
|
|
the electrogravitational part. [ref. 27]
|
|
|
|
That part was discarded by Heaviside and Gibbs, and so
|
|
electrogravitation no longer appears in the electromagnetics that
|
|
resulted from Heaviside's and Gibbs' surgery on Maxwell's quaternion
|
|
theory. Strong experimental evidence for the EG nature of
|
|
Whittaker's scalar EM theory is planned for presentation at this
|
|
conference. [ref. 28]
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
ELECTROGRAVITATION ALSO EXCLUDED FROM GENERAL RELATIVITY
|
|
|
|
The electrogravitational effect was also erroneously excluded from
|
|
Einsteinian general relativity (GR). Einstein unwittingly narrowed
|
|
his general relativity to only a subset of an unrestricted general
|
|
relativity of curved space-time, by excluding local curvature. This
|
|
GR error was an indirect result of the fundamental Heaviside/Gibbs
|
|
omission error in classical electromagnetics.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Einstein's Gedankenexperiment
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, Einstein's view of electromagnetics approximated the
|
|
classical Heaviside/Gibbs view. In classical EM theory, the
|
|
electrical potentials, which actually were electrogravitational
|
|
potentials, were already ignored as having no physical significance,
|
|
|
|
Page 9
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
and EM was considered mutually exclusive to G. Therefore, Einstein
|
|
only considered the weak gravitational force due to the attraction
|
|
of mass, in developing his general relativity theory of curved
|
|
space-time.
|
|
|
|
The G-force is far weaker than the E-force; for two electrons, for
|
|
example, the attractive G-force between them is on the order of only
|
|
10^-42 times as strong as their electrical E-force repulsion. Thus
|
|
the G-force is incredibly smaller than the EM force.
|
|
|
|
If only the weak G-force is considered for curving space-time, then
|
|
there will never be an observable curvature except in the immediate
|
|
vicinity of a very large mass, such as on the surface of the sun or
|
|
near a star.
|
|
|
|
Considering the weak G-force as the agent for curvature, Einstein
|
|
reasoned that the laboratory and the observer/scientist/instrument
|
|
would never be on the surface of the sun or near a star. Therefore,
|
|
the local space-time, where the lab and the scientist/observer and
|
|
his instruments are, would never be observably curved. The local
|
|
space-time of the observer would always be flat.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately Einstein then overgeneralized his thought examination,
|
|
and he stated one of his fundamental postulates of general
|
|
relativity as "The local space-time is always flat." This is an
|
|
erroneous overstatement.
|
|
|
|
The postulate should be more correctly stated as follows: "The local
|
|
space-time is always flat, whenever only the weak gravitational
|
|
force is used for the agent of curvature, and the observer is not
|
|
near a large collection of mass, such as a star."
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Corollary to the Corrected Postulate
|
|
|
|
The two statements of the postulate differ fundamentally.
|
|
Einstein's overstatement of the postulate does not allow the far
|
|
stronger EM force to be used as an agent for local curvature. In
|
|
effect, his own postulate excluded electromagnetics from curvature
|
|
unity with gravitation, in his general relativity theory. [ref. 29]
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, the corrected statement of the postulate admits
|
|
the following corollary:
|
|
|
|
"When a very strong force such as the electromagnetic force is
|
|
used for the agent of curvature, the local space-time may be
|
|
curved, even though the observer is not near a large
|
|
collection of mass, such as a star." [ref. 30]
|
|
|
|
Regrettably, many of Einstein's modern followers have raised
|
|
Einstein's theory to a dogma, and have vigorously enforced his
|
|
overstatement of the locally flat space-time. [ref. 31]
|
|
|
|
In so doing, general relativity has been erroneously reduced to a
|
|
theory that is basically not experimental:
|
|
|
|
A priori, if the local space-time is flat, then there is no
|
|
local experiment or local apparatus that involves or yields a
|
|
curved space-time where the laboratory, the instruments, and
|
|
the observer are located.
|
|
|
|
Page 10
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In this fashion the universities have continued to perpetuate the
|
|
exclusion of electrogravitation and its direct space-time curvature
|
|
engineering implications.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
THE CURTAILMENT OF QUANTUM MECHANICS
|
|
|
|
Today, quantum mechanics is our most successful physics theory. Its
|
|
predictions, even the eery prediction of action at a distance, have
|
|
been proven time and time again. However, quantum mechanics theory
|
|
is known to have a formidable foundations difficulty: Try as they
|
|
will, quantum physicists cannot find chaos in the theory. The
|
|
theory is known to be wrong unless it possesses chaos (hidden order
|
|
inside its statistics), yet the best efforts of quantum physicists
|
|
have failed to find it. [ref. 32]
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Chaos Excluded By Inherent Assumption
|
|
|
|
Any well-founded mathematical discipline is totally implied by its
|
|
foundations postulates, and that is true of quantum mechanics. If
|
|
the best efforts of the ablest physicists of the day cannot find
|
|
chaos in the present QM, then one may suspect that the present QM
|
|
does not contain chaos (hidden order), but already excludes it in
|
|
some fashion. If that is true, then some present QM postulate,
|
|
either explicit or implicit, of QM must be the culprit.
|
|
|
|
If so, the "real" QM needed is a superset that has at least two
|
|
subsets: one (the missing) subset includes chaos, while the present
|
|
subset excludes chaos.
|
|
|
|
So we may suspect that one or more of the postulates of the present
|
|
QM theory is in error or overly restrictive, and must be changed to
|
|
allow the missing chaotic subset.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Gibbs Statistics Excludes Hidden Order
|
|
|
|
Indeed, we may resolve this formidable QM problem quite simply by
|
|
examining the statistics utilized by quantum mechanics. When QM was
|
|
being formulated, scientists simply appropriated and included the
|
|
thermodynamic statistics of Willard Gibbs (the same Gibbs who,
|
|
together with Heaviside, was responsible for the highly restricted
|
|
vector subset of Maxwell's theory of electromagnetics.).
|
|
|
|
Gibbs' thermodynamics statistics was totally based on the notion of
|
|
the random variable. That is, the change (value assumed by the
|
|
variable in a specific instance) is not only totally statistical, it
|
|
is also totally random.
|
|
|
|
Quantum physicists assumed a postulate of QM as follows: "Quantum
|
|
change is totally statistical." However, because of the Gibbs
|
|
statistics, in application they interpreted that postulate in a much
|
|
stronger fashion, as if it had been stated thusly: "Quantum change
|
|
is totally statistical and random."
|
|
|
|
The actual postulate and the presently applied interpretation of it
|
|
are in fact two quite different statements, and the interpretation
|
|
is far more restrictive than actually implied by the postulate
|
|
itself.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 11
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Random Interpretation Is False
|
|
|
|
Further, the strong interpretation can readily be falsified. As an
|
|
example, the macroscopic universe is simply a large integration
|
|
(collection) of quantum changes. If these component quanta occur
|
|
totally randomly, then no integration of them would yield the
|
|
ordered, macroscopic world we all live in, because integrated
|
|
randomness is still random. Therefore, since the ordered macroworld
|
|
exists, the present QM strong interpretation of its own statistical
|
|
quantum change postulate is invalid.
|
|
|
|
In addition, if quantum change were totally random, then there would
|
|
never be any possibility, a priori, of engineering it
|
|
deterministically. Presently, almost all quantum physicists believe
|
|
that quantum change cannot be engineered, on first principles.
|
|
|
|
On the other hand, if hidden order is admitted, there is at least
|
|
the possibility of directly engineering physical quantum change
|
|
itself.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Hidden Variables
|
|
|
|
Interestingly, the renowned physicist David Bohm has shown that a
|
|
hidden variable theory of quantum mechanics can actually be
|
|
constructed, whereby one could potentially engineer physical change.
|
|
[ref. 33]
|
|
|
|
It is well-known that experimental physics does not in any manner
|
|
refute hidden variable theories. Because of the historical
|
|
attachment of physics to the theory of the random variable, such
|
|
contrary notions as chaos (hidden order) and hidden variables have
|
|
simply been greeted with suspicion and shuffled aside. The usual
|
|
objection is Occam's razor; a theory must predict something
|
|
different, or it is said to be unwarranted. [ref. 34]
|
|
|
|
But based on this same form of Occam's overworked razor, the
|
|
Whittaker hidden variable approach certainly predicts many
|
|
profoundly different engineerable effects and capabilities that
|
|
mandate its full examination.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Correction of the Statistical Postulate
|
|
|
|
A much better, valid interpretation of the quantum change postulate
|
|
is as follows: "Quantum change is statistical, and may contain
|
|
hidden order."
|
|
|
|
The two interpretations differ sharply. In the new and less
|
|
restrictive reinterpretation, one has three cases or subsets of QM
|
|
as follows:
|
|
|
|
(1) the subset where quantum change contains partial order,
|
|
hence is already chaotic,
|
|
(2) the subset where the internal order has vanished, leaving
|
|
the statistics as Gibbs' random variable statistics, and
|
|
exhibiting the present quantum mechanics without chaos, and
|
|
(3) the subset where the statistics is totally deterministic,
|
|
but information on the variables is lost.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 12
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Remarks On the New Interpretation
|
|
|
|
The new interpretation is consistent with Bohm's hidden variable
|
|
theory, and it is also consistent with the Schroedinger equation,
|
|
which in the QM model already propagates the QM states forward in
|
|
time with absolute determinism.
|
|
|
|
It is even possible, for example, to deterministically produce a
|
|
Bohm/de Broglie quantum potential, according to a self-targeting
|
|
repetitive phase conjugation mechanism advanced by this author.
|
|
[ref. 35]
|
|
|
|
The new interpretation is not consistent with the Copenhagen
|
|
interpretation, which only applies to the present QM subset. This
|
|
can be seen as follows: If quantum change is engineerable by
|
|
Whittaker hidden variables, then the inner contents of the
|
|
engineered quantum change are known.
|
|
|
|
This knowledge applies to the subset where QM change is engineered
|
|
(the new subset), but not to the subset where all variables are
|
|
random variables and hence not subject to engineering. Therefore
|
|
the Copenhagen interpretation applies to the random quantum change
|
|
subset, but not to chaotic (partially ordered) quantum change
|
|
subset.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
The New Interpretation Is Testable
|
|
|
|
Happily, the reinterpretation of the postulate now allows a
|
|
sufficient collection of already-chaotic quantum changes to produce
|
|
the well-ordered, macroscopic universe we all live in. Also, the
|
|
new interpretation is testable, and it can be falsified or verified
|
|
in the laboratory.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
THE END RESULT OF ABBREVIATING MAXWELL'S THEORY
|
|
|
|
Effect On EM
|
|
|
|
In discarding the scalar component of the quaternion, Heaviside and
|
|
Gibbs unwittingly discarded the unified EM/G portion of Maxwell's
|
|
theory that arises when the translational/directional components of
|
|
two interacting quaternions reduce to zero, but the scalar resultant
|
|
remains and infolds a deterministic, dynamic structure that is a
|
|
function of oppositive directional/translational components.
|
|
|
|
In the infolding of EM energy inside a scalar potential, a
|
|
structured scalar potential results, almost precisely as later shown
|
|
by Whittaker but unnoticed by the scientific community. The simple
|
|
vector equations produced by Heaviside and Gibbs captured only that
|
|
subset of Maxwell's theory where EM and gravitation are mutually
|
|
exclusive.
|
|
|
|
In that subset, electromagnetic circuits and equipment will not
|
|
ever, and cannot ever, produce gravitational or inertial effects in
|
|
materials and equipments. Not a single one of those Heaviside/Gibbs
|
|
equations ever appeared in a paper or book by James Clerk Maxwell,
|
|
even though the severely restricted Heaviside/Gibbs interpretation
|
|
is universally and erroneously taught in all Western universities as
|
|
Maxwell's theory.
|
|
|
|
Page 13
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Effect On GR
|
|
|
|
As a result of this artificial restriction of Maxwell's theory,
|
|
Einstein also inadvertently restricted his theory of general
|
|
relativity, forever preventing the unification of electromagnetics
|
|
and relativity. He also essentially prevented the present
|
|
restricted general relativity from ever becoming an experimental,
|
|
engineerable science on the laboratory bench, since a hidden
|
|
internalized electromagnetics causing a deterministically structured
|
|
local space-time curvature was excluded.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
Effect On QM
|
|
|
|
Quantum mechanics used only the Heaviside/Gibbs externalized
|
|
electromagnetics and completely missed Maxwell's internalized and
|
|
ordered electromagnetics enfolded inside a structured scalar
|
|
potential. Accordingly, QM maintained its Gibbs statistics of
|
|
quantum change, which is non-chaotic a priori.
|
|
|
|
Quantum physicists by and largely excluded Bohm's hidden variable
|
|
theory, which conceivably could have offered the potential of
|
|
engineering quantum change, engineering physical reality itself.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
In Summary
|
|
|
|
Each of the three major scientific disciplines missed and excluded a
|
|
subset of its disciplinary area, because it did not have the scalar
|
|
component of the quaternion to incorporate. Further, all of them
|
|
completely missed the significance of the Whittaker approach, which
|
|
already shows how to apply and engineer the very subsets they had
|
|
excluded.
|
|
|
|
What now exist in these areas are three inconsistent disciplines.
|
|
Each of them unwittingly excluded a vital part of its discipline,
|
|
which was the unified field part. Ironically, then, present
|
|
physicists continue to exert great effort to find the missing key to
|
|
unification of the three disciplines, but find it hopeless, because
|
|
these special subsets are already contradictory to one another, as
|
|
is quite well-known to foundations physicists.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
CONCLUSIONS
|
|
|
|
Obviously, if one wishes to unify physics, one must add back the
|
|
unintentionally excluded, unifying subsets to each discipline.
|
|
|
|
Interestingly, all three needed subsets turn out to be one and the
|
|
same, as shown in Figure 3. So application of Whittaker's work to
|
|
each one of the three disciplines produces the necessary superset of
|
|
each, and these three supersets are unified in and on the common
|
|
added Whittaker subset.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 14
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
_______________________
|
|
| |
|
|
| GENERAL |
|
|
| RELATIVITY (GR) |
|
|
_____________________|_____________________|_____________________
|
|
| | | |
|
|
| QM | APPLY | CLASSICAL |
|
|
| (MISSING | WHITTAKER | EM |
|
|
| CHAOS) | THEORY | THEORY |
|
|
|____________________|_____________________|____________________|
|
|
| |
|
|
| MIND AND SUBTLE |
|
|
| ENERGY |
|
|
|_____________________|
|
|
|
|
Figure 3. Whittaker Unification of EM, GR, and QM.
|
|
|
|
Also, as shown in the figure, one gets an added and unexpected bonus
|
|
of great value: Mind, thought, and life occupy time, and if time is
|
|
treated as a real dimension, then these are real also. Since
|
|
fundamental units in which physics is modeled are arbitrary, one can
|
|
even model physics in terms of one unit, time.
|
|
|
|
In that case, everything is a time structure. Since even physical
|
|
reality can be viewed in this fashion, it is not unreasonable to
|
|
view mind, thought, and life as real; they do after all occupy time.
|
|
|
|
However, since they do not emerge in the normal external
|
|
electromagnetics, they must lie within the hidden, internal
|
|
electromagnetics (since the photon carries both time and energy,
|
|
being a piece of action).
|
|
|
|
Without further development, we state that the Whittaker hidden
|
|
variable EM approach, in allowing the complete engineering of the
|
|
internal electromagnetics, allows the complete engineering of mind,
|
|
thought, and life. Living systems have utilized the internal EM
|
|
Whittaker channel (in and through atomic nuclear potentials and area
|
|
quantum potentials) since the beginning. [ref. 36]
|
|
|
|
Finally, the Whittaker unification linkage of the three disciplines
|
|
is testable. It is engineerable. It works.
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
NOTES AND REFERENCES
|
|
|
|
[1] P. Graneau, Ampere-Neumann Electrodynamics of Metals,
|
|
Nonantum, Massachusetts, Hadronic Press, 1985. See also P.
|
|
Graneau and P.N. Graneau, "Electrodynamic Explosions in
|
|
Liquids," Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 46, 1985, p. 468; R.
|
|
Azevedo, P. Graneau, P.N. Graneau, and C. Millet, "Powerful
|
|
Water Plasma Explosions," Phys. Lett. Vol. 117, 1986, p.
|
|
101.
|
|
|
|
[2] See Y. Aharonov and D. Bohm, "Significance of
|
|
Electromagnetic Potentials in the Quantum Theory," Phys.
|
|
Rev. Second Series, 115(3), Aug. 1, 1959, p. 458-491. This
|
|
paper pointed out the primacy of the potentials. Instead
|
|
of being causative agents, the force fields are actually
|
|
effects generated in and of charged particle systems from
|
|
the potentials. This is in complete violation of both
|
|
classical electromagnetics and classical dynamics, but it
|
|
|
|
Page 15
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
is absolutely required by quantum mechanics. For an
|
|
extensive discussion of the Aharonov-Bohm effect and an
|
|
extensive list of references, see S. Olariu and I. Iovitzu
|
|
Popescu, "The Quantum Effects of Electromagnetic Fluxes,"
|
|
Rev. Mod. Phys. 57(2), Apr. 1985.
|
|
|
|
[3] See Bertram Schwarzschild, "Currents in normal-metal rings
|
|
exhibit Aharonov-Bohm Effect," Physics Today, 39(1), Jan.
|
|
1986, p. 17-20 for confirmation.
|
|
|
|
[4] James Clerk Maxwell, A Treatise on Electricity and
|
|
Magnetism, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1873. The
|
|
third edition is published by Dover, 1954.
|
|
|
|
[5] Maxwell's true theory of electromagnetics is contained in
|
|
some 200-odd quaternion equations, and is far more complex
|
|
than the gross vector simplification developed by Heaviside
|
|
and Gibbs after Maxwell's death. For a cogent argument
|
|
about what might have been discovered much earlier in
|
|
physics if quaternions had not been cast aside, see James
|
|
D. Edmonds, Jr., "Quaternion Quantum Theory: New Physics or
|
|
Number Mysticism?", Am. J. Phys., 42(3), Mar. 1974, p. 220-
|
|
223. Just how much more powerful was Maxwell's
|
|
quaternionic expression of EM theory than was Heaviside's
|
|
(i.e., the modern) vector interpretation, was succinctly
|
|
expressed by Josephs as follows: "Hamilton's algebra of
|
|
quaternions, unlike Heaviside's algebra of vectors, is not
|
|
a mere abbreviated mode of expressing Cartesian analysis,
|
|
but is an independent branch of mathematics with its own
|
|
rules of operation and its own special theorems. A
|
|
quaternion is, in fact, a generalized or hypercomplex
|
|
number..." (H.J. Josephs, "The Heaviside Papers Found at
|
|
Paignton in 1957," Electromagnetic Theory by Oliver
|
|
Heaviside, Including an account of Heaviside's unpublished
|
|
notes for a fourth volume, and with a foreword by Sir
|
|
Edmund Whittaker, Vol. III, Third Edition, Chelsea
|
|
Publishing Co., New York, 1971, p. 660.)
|
|
|
|
[6] See E.T. Whittaker, "On the Partial Differential Equations
|
|
of Mathematical Physics," Math. Ann., Vol. 57, 1903, p.
|
|
333-355; "On an Expression of the Electromagnetic Field Due
|
|
to Electrons by Means of Two Scalar Potential Functions,"
|
|
Proc. Lond. Math. Soc., Series 2, Vol. 1, 1904, p. 367-372.
|
|
|
|
[7] In the modern view, it is trapped energy that is
|
|
gravitational, mass being viewed as simply such trapped
|
|
energy. We point out that Einstein's formula E = mc^2
|
|
actually is an expression for mass in terms of its trapped
|
|
EM energy. Thus we extend the modern view by stating that,
|
|
to first order, Newtonian gravitational attraction is due
|
|
to the attraction of spatially entrapped electromagnetic
|
|
energy. Since the electromagnetic scalar potentials
|
|
represent just such spatially entrapped EM energy, then
|
|
they hold a special significance gravitationally.
|
|
|
|
[8] This assertion can be tested. At the nodal points of the
|
|
standing potential wave, the rate of flow of time is
|
|
normal. At nonzero points along the wave, however, the
|
|
local rate of flow of local time varies from normal. After
|
|
a proper-time interval for the observer at the nodal point,
|
|
|
|
Page 16
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|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
normal clocks and watches at different non-nodal points
|
|
along the wave will appreciably vary in their time reading.
|
|
Initially synchronized clocks will thus be found to
|
|
disagree, if placed in different positions in the Whittaker
|
|
wave and allowed to remain for a test period. In the past,
|
|
various inventors have anecdotally demonstrated this
|
|
effect. As an example, see David Jones, Vancouver Sun
|
|
Times, Dec. 17, 1977, p. 17.
|
|
|
|
[9] V.K. Ignatovich, "The Remarkable Capabilities of Recursive
|
|
Relations," Am. J. Phys., 57(10), Oct. 1989, p. 873-878.
|
|
|
|
[10] Richard W. Ziolkowski, "Localized transmission of wave
|
|
energy," Proc. SPIE, Vol. 1061, Microwave and Particle Beam
|
|
Sources and Directed Energy Concepts, Jan. 1989, p. 396-397.
|
|
|
|
[11] An acoustic missile is essentially a slug of acoustic energy
|
|
that holds together as it travels, striking and damaging or
|
|
destroying a target. An electromagnetic missile is a slug
|
|
of EM energy that holds together as it travels to a target
|
|
and strikes it.
|
|
|
|
[12] A.D. Sakharov, "Vacuum Quantum Fluctuations in Curved Space
|
|
and the Theory of Gravitation," Sov. Phys. Dokl., Vol. 12,
|
|
1968, p. 1040. See also the related discussion in Misner,
|
|
Thorne and Wheeler, Gravitation, 1973, p. 426.
|
|
|
|
[13] Note that this assigns an internal structure to a
|
|
gravitational potential.
|
|
|
|
[14] A.D. Sakharov, Theor. Math. Phys., Vol. 23, 1975, p. 435.
|
|
|
|
[15] K. Akama et al, Prog. Theor. Phys., Vol. 60, 1978, p. 868.
|
|
|
|
[16] B. Hasslacher and E. Mottolo, Phys. Lett., Vol. 95B, 1980,
|
|
p. 237.
|
|
|
|
[17] A. Zee, Phys. Rev. Lett., Vol. 42, 1979, p. 417.
|
|
|
|
[18] D. Amati and G. Veneziano, Phys. Lett., Vol. 105B, 1981, p.
|
|
358; S. Yoshimoto, Prog. Theor. Phys., Vol. 78, 1987, p.
|
|
435.
|
|
|
|
[19] S. Adler, Rev. Mod. Phys., Vol. 54, 1982, p. 729.
|
|
|
|
[20] H.E. Puthoff, "Ground State of Hydrogen as a Zero-Point-
|
|
Fluctuation-Determined State," Phys. Rev. D, 35(10), May 15,
|
|
1987, p. 3266-3269.
|
|
|
|
[21] H.E. Puthoff, "Gravity as a Zero-Point-Fluctuation Force,"
|
|
Phys. Rev. A., 39(5), Mar. 1, 1989, p. 2333-2342. See also
|
|
H.E. Puthoff, "Source of Vacuum electromagnetic Zero-Point
|
|
Energy," Phys. Rev. A., 40(9), Nov. 1, 1989, p. 4857-4862.
|
|
Changing the vacuum potential constitutes a fluctuation
|
|
directly in and of the zero-point energy of vacuum, and
|
|
hence, by Puthoff's mechanism, it does indeed induce a
|
|
gravitational effect. At the level of the vacuum virtual
|
|
particle flux exchange with the charged nucleus, producing
|
|
|
|
|
|
Page 17
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
an electromagnetic change also produces a gravitational
|
|
change, and vice-versa.
|
|
|
|
[22] Puthoff, Phys. Rev. D., 35(10), May 15, 1987, p. 3266-3269.
|
|
|
|
[23] Nikola Tesla, Colorado Springs Notes 1899-1900, Nolit,
|
|
Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1978, p. 61-62.
|
|
|
|
[24] E.T. Whittaker, "On an Expression of the Electromagnetic
|
|
Field Due to Electrons by Means of Two Scalar Potential
|
|
Functions," Proc. Lond. Math. Soc., Series 2, Vol. 1,
|
|
1904, p. 367-372.
|
|
|
|
[25] The potential for weaponization of the Whittaker work should
|
|
be obvious.
|
|
|
|
[26] Toward the end of his life Heaviside lived as a recluse in a
|
|
small garret apartment, and may have returned again to his
|
|
struggle with quaternions. In the 1950's handwritten notes
|
|
of a theory of gravitation, written in quaternion
|
|
mathematics, were found beneath the floor boards of his tiny
|
|
study.
|
|
|
|
[27] T.E. Bearden, "Maxwell's Original Quaternion Theory Was a
|
|
Unified Field Theory of Electromagnetics and
|
|
Electrogravitation," Proceedings, International Tesla
|
|
Society Symposium, Colorado Springs, Colorado, July 1988.
|
|
See also T.E. Bearden, "Maxwell's Lost Unified Field Theory
|
|
of Electromagnetics and Gravitation," Proceedings, PACE
|
|
Third International New Energy Technology Symposium, June
|
|
25-28, 1988 at Maison du Citoyen, Hull (Ottawa), Canada,
|
|
1988.
|
|
|
|
[28] See Floyd Sweet and T.E. Bearden, "Utilizing Scalar
|
|
Electromagnetics to Tap Vacuum Energy," Proceedings, this
|
|
conference.
|
|
|
|
[29] Ironically, Einstein then spent the remainder of his life,
|
|
desperately trying to unify electromagnetics and gravitation
|
|
in his theory of general relativity, never realizing that
|
|
his own overstatement of his "flat local space-time"
|
|
postulate precluded his success and foredoomed all his
|
|
efforts to failure.
|
|
|
|
[30] To appreciate just what can actually be done with local
|
|
space-time curvature, see E.B. Smetanin, "Electromagnetic
|
|
Field in a Space With Curvature - New Solutions," Sov. Phys.
|
|
J., 25(2), Feb. 1982, p. 107-111.
|
|
|
|
[31] For a detailed exposition of the scientific suppression used
|
|
to uphold the present GR, written by an inside scientist of
|
|
excellent ability, and one with over 100 published papers in
|
|
the literature, see Rugero Maria Santilli, Ethical Probe on
|
|
Einstein's Followers in the USA: An Insider's View, Alpha
|
|
Publishing, POB 82, Newtonville, MA 02160, 1984.
|
|
|
|
[32] For a discussion of the missing chaos in quantum mechanics,
|
|
see Robert Pool, "Quantum Chaos: Enigma Wrapped in a
|
|
Mystery," Science, 243(4893), Feb. 17, 1989, p. 893-895.
|
|
|
|
Page 18
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For a more technical discussion see P.V. Elyutin, "The
|
|
Quantum Chaos Problem," Sov. Phys. Usp. 31(7), July 1988,
|
|
p. 597-622.
|
|
|
|
[33] For an entry point into the literature of hidden variable
|
|
theory, see Quantum Implications: Essays in Honour of David
|
|
Bohm, B. J. Hiley and F. David Peat, Eds., Routledge &
|
|
Kegan Paul, London & New York, 1987.
|
|
|
|
[34] However, even if it predicts something new and is warranted,
|
|
it still may not be adopted. An example is the continuing
|
|
reluctance of physicists to reformulate EM theory, stressing
|
|
the primacy of the potential and the fact that not the force
|
|
field but only the potential for the force field exists in
|
|
the vacuum. Even more so, it is well-known that detection
|
|
is actually binary, and we throw away precisely half of
|
|
almost every detection our instruments make. C.f. Richard
|
|
Kidd et al, "Evolution of the Modern Photon," Am. J. Phys.,
|
|
57(1), Jan. 1989, p. 27-35. Generally in every
|
|
electromagnetic interaction of our instruments, two photons
|
|
are produced: one a time-forward photon, and the other a
|
|
time-reversed photon. Our detectors essentially measure the
|
|
time-forward photon half, not the time-reversed photon
|
|
(antiphoton) half. The antiphoton half produces a slight
|
|
recoil force (Newton's third law reaction force) in the mass
|
|
(nuclei) of the instrument, which we ignore. Also, we
|
|
continue to ignore the evidence that the photon and
|
|
antiphoton are not identical. In a pumped phase conjugate
|
|
mirror, for example, the emission of a normal photon from
|
|
the mirror material results in a recoil of the mirror; the
|
|
emission of an antiphoton by the mirror material, however,
|
|
does not result in recoil of the mirror. Physics is still
|
|
not consistent, as is well-known to foundations researchers,
|
|
but this fact is generally not accented to university
|
|
students.
|
|
|
|
[35] Bearden, Gravitobiology, Tesla Book Co., 1991, p. 33-36.
|
|
The mechanism was previously advanced in several
|
|
miscellaneous papers and in private correspondence.
|
|
|
|
[36] See Bearden, Gravitobiology, Tesla Book Co., for additional
|
|
development of biological effects and mechanisms of scalar
|
|
EM.
|
|
*******************
|
|
End of paper
|
|
*******************
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|
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|
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