Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2009 APS April Meeting
Volume 54, Number 4
Saturday–Tuesday, May 2–5, 2009; Denver, Colorado
Session X13: Quantum Mechanics and Tests of Physics Laws |
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Sponsoring Units: GPMFC Chair: Hugh Lippincott, Yale University Room: Plaza Court 3 |
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 1:30PM - 1:42PM |
X13.00001: ABSTRACT HAS BEEN MOVED TO T14.00009 |
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 1:42PM - 1:54PM |
X13.00002: Ballistic Model for the Hydrogen Atom's Quantum Spectrum Eduardo Quincoces The purpose is to disclose a Ballistic Model which is used as a platform to support a new understanding of the details of the Quantum Spectrum of the Hydrogen Atom. [Preview Abstract] |
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 1:54PM - 2:06PM |
X13.00003: ABSTRACT HAS BEEN MOVED TO D11.00009 |
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 2:06PM - 2:18PM |
X13.00004: Additive Special Relativity (ASR) Alaa Altimimy We claimed that there is a rest frame for the quantum, for instance a rest mass of quantum (photonic mass) can be applied to construct an additive special relativity ASR, a non covariant form of moment and energy is driven from a conventional Lagrangian, then we claimed a new four elements tensor mass and four velocity. A covariant form of ASR Lagrangian is claimed to derive a covariant form of mass tensor. Agreements and disagreements between both SR and ASR theories are mentioned. [Preview Abstract] |
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 2:18PM - 2:30PM |
X13.00005: Six Not-So-Hidden Field Dimensions Terrence McGrath We propose a new approach to the fundamental description of fields. By expanding Bohm's spherical potential well to include six separate but related wave generators to represent nuclear matter, a new model for the mechanism underlying the generation of fields is introduced. In so doing a radically new organization to particle fields is revealed. The proposed model relates atomic to nuclear physics, providing a new starting point for the full description of atoms. Treating the nucleus as a spherical potential well produces a real wave-based spherical metric structure containing useful subtleties in discussing symmetry, coherence, organization, segregation, and locality. The spherical potential also provides a wave-based description for infinite fields and lattice regularization limits while identifying the central starting point for local field generation within the atom. Because six radiative electromagnetic components are used to replace the six-plus hidden dimensions of string theory we are enabled to describe fields in terms of Cartesian coordinates, time and six-plus wave components. [Preview Abstract] |
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 2:30PM - 2:42PM |
X13.00006: Plasma redshift, dark matter, and rotational velocities Ari Brynjolfsson Great many experiments confirm the newly discovered and theoretically deduced plasma-redshift cross-section and the associated heating in the coronas of the Sun, stars, galaxies, and quasars. The experiments show that the intergalactic plasma has an average electron density Ne=0.0002 per cubic cm with an average per particle temperature of 2.7 million K. These densities and temperatures predict the observed cosmological redshift, the observed magnitude-redshift relation for SN Ia, the observed cosmic microwave background (CMB), and the cosmic X-ray background. There is no need for big bang, inflation, expansion, accelerated expansion, dark energy, dark matter, nor cosmic time dilation. In this paper we show how the dense intergalactic plasma (more than 1200 times denser than that assumed in the big-bang cosmology) leaks into the gravitational depressions and increases the Galactic mass from 90 billions solar masses at 8 kpc to 2000 billions at 250 kpc, resulting in flat rotation. The same applies to other galaxies, galaxy clusters, and gravitational lenses. There is no need for dark matter nor big bang, only basic physics in an infinite, everlasting world. [Preview Abstract] |
Tuesday, May 5, 2009 2:42PM - 2:54PM |
X13.00007: Nature of Reality Sunil Thakur Nothing, not even energy, is endowed with the powers of self-manifestation and needs a medium to manifest itself. Energy and matter remain unmanifested in the absence of each other. Even visible light manifests itself only for the moment it interacts with the matter. Since every physical entity needs a medium to manifest itself therefore its manifested form depends not just on its own properties but also on the properties of the observer, frame of reference of the observer, and method of observation. At any given time, properties of a physical entity are observer-independent and hence are absolute but manifested form of the entity is observer dependent and hence is always relative. Apparently, what is perceivable is relative. Relativity appears to be an inherent feature of the perceptible universe but only till we view space and time separately or measure space and time in different frames of reference. Distortion of space (or length contraction of Lorentz transformation) and time dilation are directly proportionate i.e. when space contracts, so does time in the same proportion and when space expands, time also expands in the same proportion and hence speed of energy reflected through speed of light must remain constant in all frames of reference. Relativity appears only when we measure space and time in different frames of reference; absolute emerges when we view objects as space-time structures. What is relative cannot be real and what is real is unperceivable. In this paper, I have explored nature of reality through fundamental concepts of physics. [Preview Abstract] |
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