Saturday 2 January 2021

GRAVITY - TIME - ELECTROMAGNETISM - WEAK NUCLEAR - STRONG NUCLEAR - LIFEFORCE

 


2nd January 2021:

http://www.noelhodson.com/index_files/Life-Universe-Everything-8Mar2011.pdf

26 of 28 TIME – DARK ENERGY – DARK MATTER From: Noel Hodson Sent: 21 November 2020 11:41 To: 'jlevin@barnard.edu’ jlevin@barnard.edu Subject: Black Hole Survival Guide 21 NOV 2020 - Dear Professor Levin, A friend gave me your Black Hole Survival Guide. It elucidates some of the most profound cosmic mysteries. An excellent short summary, with excellent metaphors and similes to illustrate your concepts - and convey them relatively painlessly into my thick-skull. You might care to add to your information and thinking, ideas that have occurred to me over the past 60 years. See this link. Friday, 23 October 2020 GRAVITY ETC. - RECAP OCT 20 It is probable that all objects in the universe, including black-holes and ourselves, have an event horizon. Where these horizons meet wavicles are created that we name as particles. Thus, no object “sees” the reality of any other object. We “see” and exchange in-form-ation at the event horizons. These horizons are spheres emanating from the “real” object at the core within. When we humans (our spheres) observe or react with a particle/wavicle on the surface of another sphere – it affects the entire sphere and thus all particles on the sphere; action at a distance. Best wishes - (Mr) Noel Hodson 

Everything we “see” in the universe is in the past. Whether it is 1 metre or 1 million light years away, its light takes time to reach us. The distance between it and us is filled with broadcast spheres of quantized propagating light. The space between is not empty. It is always full. Go halfway to the Sun and its light-waves will strike you in what we had thought to be empty-space. The broadcasts are dark-matter. Their expanding propagation is dark-energy. If the spheres, the event-horizons, stop broadcasting then the object disappears. It ceases to exist (stand-out). The history of the waves, over Time, is real energy. History has mass. Time is dark-matter. 

http://www.noelhodson.com/index_files/Life-Universe-Everything-8Mar2011.pdf


28 of 28 Sources and resources: New Scientist Issues 1 to 3312 – Scientific American 1958 to 1992 – University of Oxford Dept for Continuing Education, Particle & Astrophysics, Tutor David Chapple, Jan 2010 to Jan 2014. – BOOKS : Gravity, Brian Glegg – Nothing, New Scientist – Newton Never at Rest, Richard S Westfall – Paradoxes of Time Travel, Ryan Wasserman – Lightspeed, John C.H. Spence – Electric Universe, David Bodanis – The Quark and the Jaguar, Murray Gell-Mann – The Science Delusion, Rupert Sheldrake – The Ascent Of Gravity, Marcus Chown – The Order of Time, Carlo Rovelli – Seven Brief Lessons on Physics, Carlo Rovelli – Supersymmestry (Superposition), David Walton – Infinity in the palm of your hand, Marcus Chown – The Theory of Relativity: and other essays, Albert Einstein – The Quantum World, NS – QED, Richard Feynman – Elementary Particles and the Laws of Physics, Richard P Feynman – The speed of mass, Philip J Morgan – Everything is Physics, Andrew Worsley – What we cannot know: Marcus du Sautoy – Douglas Adams – The Great Mathematicians, Raymond Flood, Robin Wilson – The Stuff of the Universe, John Gribben & Martin Rees – The Scientific Exploration of Mars, Frederic W. Taylor – Schrodinger’s Kittens and the search for reality, John Gribbin – The Number Mysteries, Marcus du Sautoy – Chaos, James Gleick – The Tao of Physics, Fritjof Capra – The God Delusion, Richard Dawkins – About Time, Einstein’s unfinished revolution, Paul Davies, - Einstein’s Cosmos, Michio Kaku – The Music of the Primes, Marcus du Sautoy – Leonardo The First Scientist, Michael White – The Diversity of Life, Edward O Wilson – The Ghost in the Atom, PCW Davies & JR Brown – The Elegant Universe, Brian Greene – The Science of Genetics, Charlotte Auerbach – Richard Feynman and modern physics, James Gleick – Modern Science Writing, Richard Dawkins – The Dreams that Stuff is Made Of, Stephen Hawking – Inside the Centre, Oppenheimer, by Ray Monk – The Code Book, Simon Singh – Isaac Newton, James Gleick – The Void, Frank Close – INNUMERACY, John Allen Paulos – Einstein, Banesh Hoffman & Helen Dukas – What do you care what other people think? , Richard Feynman – The Dancing Wu Li Masters, Gary Zukav – Sustainable Energy without the hot air, David JC MacKay – The Goldilocks Enigma, Paul Davies – The Joy of Pi, David Blatner – Five Equatios that changed the world, Michael Guillen – The Case of the Missing Neutrino, John Gribbin – Constructing Reality, John Marburger – Astronomy, Fred Hoyle – Viruses from Space, Fred Hoyle & Chandra Wikramahsinge & John Watkins – ASIMOV Guide to Science – Einstein for Beginners, Joseph Schwartz & Michael McGuiness – Before the Beginning, on Stephen Hawking by Martin Rees - A natural history of zero, Robert Kaplan – Catching the Light, Arthur Zajonc – In Search of Schrodinger’s Cat, John Gribbin – QED The strange theory of light and matter, Richard P. Feynman – The End of Time, Julian Babour – The Last Three Minutes, Paul Davies – The Quantum Society, Danah Zohar & Ian Marshall – The Cosmic Blueprint, Paul Davies – The Trouble with Physics, Lee Smolin – The Astonishing Hypothesis, Francis Crick – The Birth of Time, John Gribbin – In Search of the Edge of Time, John Gribbin – Six Easy Lesson & Six Not so Easy Lessons, Feynman - A brief History of Time, and A Life in Science, Stephen Hawking – Lectures at The Royal Society


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