Are Fragments of Energy the Fundamental Building Blocks of the Universe? (theconversation.com) 99
hcs_$reboot shares a remarkable new theory from Larry M. Silverberg, an aerospace engineering professor at North Carolina State University (with colleague Jeffrey Eischen). They're proposing that matter is not made of particles (or even waves), as was long thought, but fragments of energy.
[W]hile the theories and math of waves and particles allow scientists to make incredibly accurate predictions about the universe, the rules break down at the largest and tiniest scales. Einstein proposed a remedy in his theory of general relativity. Using the mathematical tools available to him at the time, Einstein was able to better explain certain physical phenomena and also resolve a longstanding paradox relating to inertia and gravity. But instead of improving on particles or waves, he eliminated them as he proposed the warping of space and time.Using newer mathematical tools, my colleague and I have demonstrated a new theory that may accurately describe the universe... Instead of basing the theory on the warping of space and time, we considered that there could be a building block that is more fundamental than the particle and the wave....
Much to our surprise, we discovered that there were only a limited number of ways to describe a concentration of energy that flows. Of those, we found just one that works in accordance with our mathematical definition of flow. We named it a fragment of energy... Using the fragment of energy as a building block of matter, we then constructed the math necessary to solve physics problems... More than 100 [years] ago, Einstein had turned to two legendary problems in physics to validate general relativity: the ever-so-slight yearly shift — or precession — in Mercury's orbit, and the tiny bending of light as it passes the Sun... In both problems, we calculated the trajectories of the moving fragments and got the same answers as those predicted by the theory of general relativity. We were stunned.
Our initial work demonstrated how a new building block is capable of accurately modeling bodies from the enormous to the minuscule. Where particles and waves break down, the fragment of energy building block held strong. The fragment could be a single potentially universal building block from which to model reality mathematically — and update the way people think about the building blocks of the universe.
[W]hile the theories and math of waves and particles allow scientists to make incredibly accurate predictions about the universe, the rules break down at the largest and tiniest scales. Einstein proposed a remedy in his theory of general relativity. Using the mathematical tools available to him at the time, Einstein was able to better explain certain physical phenomena and also resolve a longstanding paradox relating to inertia and gravity. But instead of improving on particles or waves, he eliminated them as he proposed the warping of space and time.Using newer mathematical tools, my colleague and I have demonstrated a new theory that may accurately describe the universe... Instead of basing the theory on the warping of space and time, we considered that there could be a building block that is more fundamental than the particle and the wave....
Much to our surprise, we discovered that there were only a limited number of ways to describe a concentration of energy that flows. Of those, we found just one that works in accordance with our mathematical definition of flow. We named it a fragment of energy... Using the fragment of energy as a building block of matter, we then constructed the math necessary to solve physics problems... More than 100 [years] ago, Einstein had turned to two legendary problems in physics to validate general relativity: the ever-so-slight yearly shift — or precession — in Mercury's orbit, and the tiny bending of light as it passes the Sun... In both problems, we calculated the trajectories of the moving fragments and got the same answers as those predicted by the theory of general relativity. We were stunned.
Our initial work demonstrated how a new building block is capable of accurately modeling bodies from the enormous to the minuscule. Where particles and waves break down, the fragment of energy building block held strong. The fragment could be a single potentially universal building block from which to model reality mathematically — and update the way people think about the building blocks of the universe.
Bill Hicks Knew This 30 Years Ago. (Score:5, Funny)
âoeToday a young man on acid realized that all matter is merely energy condensed to a slow vibration, that we are all one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively, there is no such thing as death, life is only a dream, and we are the imagination of ourselves. Here's Tom with the Weather.â
Re: (Score:1)
Probably nonsense (Score:1, Troll)
Re: Probably nonsense (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, they sure needed to call the armchair experts on Slashdot to judge the latest piece of research "utter nonsense" in a matter of seconds without even looking at it closely. --.--
By the way. Do you know what the assembled scientific geniuses of the world said about his Feynman diagrams when he presented them? "Utter nonsense."
So even if you were experts, ... sorry, but I prefer the kind of experts that go "Interesting!" instead of "How dare you rustle my jimmies! Conserve the status quo!". Even if it is wrong, you didn't actually determine that, or your comment would be a lot more detailed and a lot later.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Probably nonsense (Score:2)
Right, but technically, hypotheses are speculation, just more informed speculation, based on training and knowledge.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Back to junior high YOU go. Your "hypothesis/theory/testing/rinse/repeat reveals truth" algorithm/rubric is rarely the way science is carried out or understood, except on science-project display boards in 7th grade, especially the misunderstanding of theory->testing.
Iterative? Sort of. Lots of testing against reality? Absolutely. The rest is a polished turd.
Re: (Score:1)
No, you really need to go back to junior high. Science is a process. Feel free to look it up. As previously mentioned I won't do your research for you.
I know, it sucks. You're on the Internet. You get to ask people to do your work for you.
Fuck the hell off and go look up how the scientific process works.
E
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
"Science is an iterative process by which hypothesis/theory/testing/rinse/repeat reveals truth."
False! Science is both a philosophy and an iterative process which follows that philosophy for developing models which can be used to make predictions. Truth is entirely off-topic. Science dodges the issue of truth by including axioms which essentially assert that if the model works and provides utility it doesn't matter what is true.
Re: (Score:2)
You are almost certainly right (like 99.9999%) and the understanding of how many crazy theories people come up with about physics is difficult for people outside the field to understand. However
Go do your own research, and leave the whining aside until you've done so.
Is no longer good advice. There are massive rabbit holes of deliberately designed misinformation that people fall down long before they reach truth. You have to give them a little guidance.
This gets even worse in the field of physics. Take, for example, the ideas of Roger Penrose that intelligence is a quantum pheno
Re: (Score:1)
I kept hoping someone would respond. Sadly, no. You make good sense. Thank you for taking the time to write up enough detail to make it clear you know of what you speak... that the process is not simple... that practitioners come in all flavors... and that some of us try to get the truth (that would be "unvarnished nonfiction") out there.
V/R
Ehud Gavron
Tucson AZ US
Re: Probably nonsense (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, yer right. We should give every speculative theory the benefit of the doubt since physicists have nothing better to do than run down the latest brainchild of some armchair physicist.
Re: (Score:3)
By the way. Do you know what the assembled scientific geniuses of the world said about his Feynman diagrams when he presented them? "Utter nonsense."
I just read 2 very fucking verbose histories of Feynman's Diagrams. Learned a lot of shit I didn't know.
One thing I did not learn was what you asserted right here. In fact, all evidence indicates the contrary.
Can you back this assertion up, or did you just invent it to shore up your point?
Re: Probably nonsense (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
(pause)
A Witch!
Re: (Score:2)
Looking at the wikipedia page of the Physical Essays https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] it mentions it had an impact factor https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] of 0.245 (2013) although it's old data and the metric can be questioned in itself, an average of less then one in four published paper gets cited once leads me to believe this isn't considered a serious publication (a paper published in Nature gets cited about 38 times on average).
Re: (Score:1)
Pretty likely BS. As are all other current explanations. Unless and until a GUT is found, all this stuff is just speculation and the mathematical extremists have been running amok in the theoretical physics space for a long time now.
Here is the published article (Score:5, Informative)
Re: Here is the published article (Score:2)
Damn, you were quicker than me. Nevermind my other comment then...
Re: (Score:2)
You mean quanta? (Score:4, Informative)
Of energy?
Sounds like what everybody thought for quite some time already, but could not put into concrete words, so they used "wave" or "particle" or, better, "wavefunction" to mean the same thing.
Looks worthy of a read-through.
Re: You mean quanta? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
My semi-educated prediction is that someone will eventually show that Silverberg and Eischen's system is mathematically equivalent to General Relativity.
Color me stupid.. (Score:2)
Is this theory any closer to a proving a unified theory? Is it able to factor the state, position or decay of an individual particle in an entangled system, or is the devil still dealing the cards?
Re: Color me stupid.. (Score:2)
To answer thar, we would first have to find out if it gives the correct results for all those experiments we did to check the theories of relarivity and quantum field theory.
Which would take quite some time.
And to be frank, given how the community is somehow surprisingly much like an old boys club for being supposedly scientists, and this not exactly being the luckiest of ways of becoming know to them (This The Conversation article reads like pseudoscience and has numerous obvious esoterics in the comments)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Color me stupid.. (Score:5, Insightful)
fred911 inquired:
Is this theory any closer to a proving a ... theory?
Prompting Aighearach to sneer:
From the summary: an aerospace engineering professor at ... State University
And Einstein was a Swiss patent clerk when he published his first paper on relativity.
Credentialism is elitist crap. Srinivasa Ramanujan [wikipedia.org] never obtained a degree of any kind, despite making major contributions to mathematics as an undergrad, before his untimely death at 32 from complications of tuberculosis.
Dismissing serious work without bothering even to read it simply because its author is an outsider to the field is moronically short-sighted ...
Re: (Score:2)
Actually, Einstein was a Physics PhD from ETH Zurich. Back then it was already one of the best STEM universities on the planet.
Re:Color me stupid.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Hence, he published the papers while still a patent clerk, then got his PhD.
Re: (Score:2)
Actually [wikipedia.org]:
Hence, he published the papers while still a patent clerk, then got his PhD.
So he was a patent clerk while being a PhD student. So what? Lots of students need to work some job in addition to their studies.
Re: (Score:2)
My post was a rebuttal to your rebuttal:
You claimed he had a PhD at the time he wrote his paper on special relativity [which is the paper specifically mentioned by the OP and hence sets the context in time] in September, 1905. All I'm saying is that's simply not true. He didn't receive his PhD until January, 1906.
If you're going to be pedantic, at least get it right.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
It isn't credentialism, though.
You're just being a moron. Now you'll also show that you don't understand ad hominems, because your panties are bunching and you confuse if for logic.
And somebody who never received a degree, but did something, is a completely different case than somebody who is an active academician, and who yet has chosen a different specialization than the one he's blathering on. And in fact, his blatherings resemble stereotypical mistakes that people from his specialty make when they look
No, and a quick explanation (Score:3)
Is this theory any closer to a proving a unified theory? Is it able to factor the state, position or decay of an individual particle in an entangled system, or is the devil still dealing the cards?
No, and for the following reason.
The proposed theory (and QM and relativity) assumes that space and all vector fields are "smooth", in the mathematical sense. This means that measurements can be accurate to any degree, which implies that differentiation and integration will be valid in that explanation.
When measurements are real numbers (as opposed to quantized values represented by rational numbers) then any calculations on these measurements becomes non-computable - in essence, the results of any experime
Re: (Score:2)
Well, in a sense yes, because it makes thinking outside the box a bit more acceptable. But by its contents? Not that I can see. Still, this is Science at work and even wild speculation deserves some consideration when the solution to a problem has eluded the best minds for a long, long time.
There is still the possibility that a GUT does not exist and that Physics is actually far less impartial about how it gets looked at than the current model says. We still have to see quantum-effects meaningfully scale up
This has been around for a while (Score:5, Interesting)
The idea that particles are "simply" functions of energy, has been proposed many times before. This is not new. What could be new (but who reads TFA anyway??) is there is a way to prove it.
Or to put it more simply, matter does not exist on any scale, it just appears to do so due to energy interactions. This is not a difficult concept to understand, as most matter is empty space even with the current understanding. Each particle is a collection of even smaller particles, so there is no reason to disbelieve that the smallest particles are not physical at all, just energy.
Re: (Score:2)
I have believed this since 1957 (I was 12). Matter is an illusion.
I have been frustrated all my life because I believe that if physicists would accept this view, we would be far more advanced in understanding and using energy. So many have been so wrong for so long that one wonders if the physics community isn't in a quagmire.
Re: (Score:2)
I have believed this since 1957 (I was 12). Matter is an illusion.
You are sort of right and sort of "not even wrong".
You are right in the fundamental message of E=mc^2. Any matter can be converted to energy. There are theories that even the most fundamental particles can simply decay [wikipedia.org]. You are also right that physics is stuck in a quagmire
You are "not even wrong"(look it up) in the sense that I have no real idea what more you mean and I don't think you really do either. If what you said was true then what difference would it make to the world and the way it behaves? T
Re: (Score:1)
Paywall / Low Content Intro (Score:2)
The introduction makes a vague claim that matter and energy are one and the same... we already know that. The real guts of the theory are behind a $140 paywall.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Paywall / Low Content Intro (Score:5, Informative)
Bullshit!
It's a $25 paywall.
And here's the direct link:
https://www.mae.ncsu.edu/eisch... [ncsu.edu]
From his homepage at https://www.mae.ncsu.edu/eisch... [ncsu.edu]
Re: (Score:3)
Why Mercury precession ? (Score:2)
Surely that is already a solved problem ? I don't get why something so practical could help test their theory ? And why it was suprsing that it worked out ?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
In short, the tactic of choosing those two things to reprove is basically PR because of the
Re: (Score:3)
I also suspected PR.
So will Slashdot now take down this nonsense ?
Re: (Score:2)
That's ridiculous, the Universe is made of orgone.
Re: Why Mercury precession ? (Score:2)
In addition, generally when proposing a vast new theory, you should also be demonstrating that the theory accounts for existing unexplained observations. Alternatively, it should make verifiable observational predictions that other theories can't.
I won't say it's easy, but there are many theories that have been proposed that account for a limited number of observations. The successful ones account for all relevant observations, and predict new ones.
As I recall general relativity's first major success was in
Re: (Score:2)
Yes but expecting it to be delivered as a solution fully covering all cases is ridiculous.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
If they've tested 500 different scenarios do you really want to read a list of all of them? They listed two of the more famous and generally understandable examples, I seriously doubt that they stopped there.
Re: (Score:2)
A selection of articles from the "journal" (Score:5, Informative)
Here's a selection of abstracts of other articles from the journal Physics Essays (I am not paying $25 to read each full article). Scores come from John Baez's Crackpot Index [ucr.edu].
Relative simultaneity does not exist
Then how does one explain our experimental evidence that clocks run at different rates in various relative velocities and gravities? Crackpot Score: +2
Refutation of Einstein’s relativity on the basis of the incorrect derivation of the inertial mass increase violating the principle of energy conservation. A paradigm shift in physics
Apparently, this author is not aware that physicists stoppped using the concept of "relativistic mass" many decades ago (Einstein himself said it was a bad concept). Crackpot Score: +29 (Impressive for just an abstract!)
This journal seems to be a crackpot magnet.
Re: (Score:3)
What's really funny about the first is that it claims GPS disapproves the relativity of simultaneity. In actuality, GPS and similar systems rely on it.
The clocks on each satellite are synchronized, even advancing with a slight adjustment for relativity due to their orbital speeds. Each satellite broadcasts a signal that contains high-resolution time information (plus orbit and other information). Receivers see signals offset to each other in time due to the travel time of light, and determine their posit
Re: (Score:2)
Apparently, this author is not aware that physicists stoppped using the concept of "relativistic mass" many decades ago
I'm not aware either. Care to explain?
As my school is about 30 years ago and my diploma in physics about 20.
Re: (Score:2)
In short, it's because "relativistic mass" already has a better name: energy. The relativistic mass of a particle is equal to the total energy of the particle (kinetic + potential + mass (E = mc^2)) divided by c^2. For more details, read this and other blog posts by Prof. Matt Strassler [profmattstrassler.com]. He has an entire series of basic explanations of modern high-energy particle physics.
Re: (Score:2)
So there is one single physicist who doe it different?
Since 7 years?
And you say: since decades?
Hm ....
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Hu?
You forgot to write something.
Re: (Score:2)
Not a bad article, not sure if he is on point or not. But linguistics have obviously an influence how our mind ticks.
Re: (Score:2)
global simultaneity as exists in the Global Positioning System invalidates the prediction
Crackpot Score: +2
Only +2 ? I've worked with GPS software and we do indeed consider special relativity in the computations, so his whole point is moot.
Re: (Score:2)
The score was based on just the abstract. Plus, everyone's score starts at a charitable -5.
Direct link to the paper: [free] (Score:4, Informative)
https://www.mae.ncsu.edu/eisch... [ncsu.edu]
To save you the $25 and the awful text at "The Conversation".
i know!!! (Score:2)
next question...
Betteridge's Law of Headlines says... (Score:1)
"Hmm. On one hand I'm tempted to say 'no' as usual because you have just made an alternate formula that satisfies Mercury's precession prediction in General Relativity and haven't answered the actual question.
"On the other hand, I'm tempted to say 'yes' as we already thought this was the case and used different words, like 'quanta' and 'packet'.
"Which to choose... ibble obble..."
Verifyable predictions (Score:2)
The notions of physical objects, time and space as fundamental properties in the universe is easily challenged [slashdot.org]. Just note for instance that it is impossible to demonstrate that a particle exists without interacting with it. Consider the double slit experiment: it's hard to ma
Reminds me of a toy model (Score:2)
I recall a toy model where you have a point mass with a newtonian gravitational field. Then similar to electromagnetism you take the energy density of the gravitational field (all newtonian) , and through the equivalence of energy and mass, let this graviational field affect the effective mass at a distance R
So the effective mass at each distance now becomes variable. This toy model predicts the deflection of light as well as the existence of black holes.
The authors offered the model as a valid chal
Forgive me (Score:5, Informative)
While I think it’s interesting to formulate an approach using continuous 4D vectors and energy conservation, they need to show why this approach makes any inroads or insight over the standard model whatsoever or show why fundamentally it is a better approach from a closed form solution approach or something to this effect. Worth reading the first bit, and glancing over how they derived the formulas but unless something else gets added I wouldn’t hold my breath it goes anywhere.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
(*) But for 5 of those there ar
Re: (Score:3)
Many (*) physicists who think they 'improved' either quantum mechanics or general relativity actually just derive them from other axioms or use other math methods and the end result is purely equivalent. Not to say it's useless as sometimes concepts are easier to grasp with one method than the other. Case in point, the 'information theory reformulation' of quantum physics is much clearer on many paradoxes than the usual approach. But those don't provide actual 'new' physics. (*) But for 5 of those there are 500 crackpots.
Very true. When I first learned of how information theory actually works it blew my mind. Not because it added anything new, per se, but it provided another way to view the same thing that sure adds to the flavor of being a key to understanding what a better plausible theory might look like.
A different reformulation that totally blew my mind when I first heard it was the concept of exergy and how it can simplify problems with energy transfer. I had always wondered what the energy of a compressed air s
Re: (Score:1)
So they have apparently used the Bianchi identities as a substitute for the usual Einstein equation. This works best with coordinates that are orthogonal, homogeneous and covariant.
Everything follows the geodesic path (Score:2)
So, what did they expect? That this lump of energy somehow does not obey the rules of general relativity?
Re: (Score:2)
This. This. There's nothing new in that paper, except some /extremely/ questionable numerical integrations.
Please stop highlighting crackpots (Score:1)
Yes, this guy is a crackpot.
Is his paper on the arXiv? No.
Is his paper in a reputable journal? No.
Does he provide anything to back up his wishy-washy assertions? No.
It's published in a pay-to-view crackpot journal. It is not readily available for verification by scientists. He might as well be the time cube guy at this point.
Re: (Score:2)
Low-impact Journal (Score:2)
If the universe is made up of matter and energy... (Score:2)
...and you wind up describing matter as a form of energy, I think our previous nomenclature has become meaningless.
as a physicist... (Score:2)
As a physicist, this looks like a simple algebraic rendition of relativity. It doesn't look like there's anything here that can't be found in an undergraduate relativity textbook.
Re: (Score:2)
As an engineer, this looks like the paper costs $25.00. I'm not clickin' that ....
Qualifications for responses (Score:1)
Eh (Score:2)
Not exactly a radical new theory. Itâ(TM)s been my basic theory for a long time. And letâ(TM)s face it if you can reduce everything down to one building block it really doesnâ(TM)t matter what you call it whether you call it energy or particles or waves the distinction is really meaningless once you get down to one item.