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Author Topic:   Foundation of Everything
JonF
Member (Idle past 167 days)
Posts: 6174
Joined: 06-23-2003


Message 61 of 65 (72298)
12-11-2003 1:24 PM
Reply to: Message 60 by WebFeet
12-11-2003 9:27 AM


Re: Humble Pie - best served in Large Amounts
The photon has no mass.
Why?
The photon is represented in the HLT by E = R
Why?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 60 by WebFeet, posted 12-11-2003 9:27 AM WebFeet has not replied

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 Message 62 by FrankM, posted 12-15-2003 2:28 PM JonF has not replied

  
FrankM
Inactive Member


Message 62 of 65 (72994)
12-15-2003 2:28 PM
Reply to: Message 61 by JonF
12-11-2003 1:24 PM


Triangle Relationship to Physical Constants
I have been following the Gamert discussion with interest, but could not execute the Gamert software. My w98 and w95(osr2) machines reject with the KERNEL32DLL error.
I found an interesting right triangle relationship that isn't as encompassing as claimed by the Gamert application and was attempting to determine if there was any correlation with their concept. The following URL is a simplistic presentation -
No webpage found at provided URL: http://www.vip.ocsnet.net/~ancient/MathPerfect.pdf
An expanded writeup is at -
No webpage found at provided URL: http://www.vip.ocsnet.net/~ancient/Universal.pdf
Can anyone outside of Gamert confirm that the program works on an XP machine?

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 Message 61 by JonF, posted 12-11-2003 1:24 PM JonF has not replied

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 Message 63 by WebFeet, posted 12-16-2003 6:38 AM FrankM has replied

  
WebFeet
Inactive Member


Message 63 of 65 (73278)
12-16-2003 6:38 AM
Reply to: Message 62 by FrankM
12-15-2003 2:28 PM


Windows 98
Frank
There is a version of Gamert for Windows98 available from the Gamert web site.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 62 by FrankM, posted 12-15-2003 2:28 PM FrankM has replied

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 Message 64 by FrankM, posted 12-16-2003 2:06 PM WebFeet has not replied

  
FrankM
Inactive Member


Message 64 of 65 (73376)
12-16-2003 2:06 PM
Reply to: Message 63 by WebFeet
12-16-2003 6:38 AM


Triangle Relationship to Physical Constants
WebFeet,
The w98 version works fine. My process always remains a right triangle, just the value of the hypotenuse changes (always the cosecant of the angle).

This message is a reply to:
 Message 63 by WebFeet, posted 12-16-2003 6:38 AM WebFeet has not replied

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 Message 65 by FrankM, posted 12-18-2003 1:20 AM FrankM has not replied

  
FrankM
Inactive Member


Message 65 of 65 (73987)
12-18-2003 1:20 AM
Reply to: Message 64 by FrankM
12-16-2003 2:06 PM


Time Angle
I have added a small figure to the MathPerfect article that displays two time angles and their associated "hydrogen" circles. The vertical leg is always the constant and the hypotenuse is essentially the time vector.
http://www.vip.ocsnet.net/~ancient/MathPerfect04.pdf
The radius of the outer hydrogen circle relates to the time unit defined by the SI second. The radius of the inner hydrogen circle represents a relationship to a mathematically defined unit of time. The following URL discusses the history of defining the earth second and the vagaries of the current SI second.
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/...25/time/metrologia-leapsecond.pdf
The SI second is not an absolute constant, it is a defined unit of "convenience", something that can be used as a reference until a better value is determined. The conclusions in the above article indicate that at some time the accumulating error will have to be addressed, and "Therefore, we should perhaps not be too hesistant in adapting to modern technology and modern needs."
A modern need could be the establishment of a unit of time that is not trying to emulate the 1/86,400th division of the revolution of an earth sized planet (with a perfect rotation), but create a mathematically defined unit of time. The geometric-mathematical relationships defined in Universal.pdf could provide the basis for the definition.

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