View Full Version : the fine structure constant has broken


nalxhal
10-12-06, 02:42 PM
http://www.thescienceforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=22449#22449

Billy T
10-12-06, 03:48 PM
At end of your reference there is another link. At end of it, there is something about the fine structure constant, but hard to tell what this Bulgarian professor is saying. As the fine structure constant has agreement between theory and experiment to about nine decimal places in what sense is it "broken"?

geodesic
10-12-06, 05:35 PM
Indeed. Following the links Billy T mentions, I came to the article (NB. the Bulgarian professor is the name of the university. The author was Nikos Alexandris) which says:
The first system has the three forces that we know in our world: electromagnetic, gravity and electricity. The second system has the known thermal energy and an unknown that I call a remnant force. The thermal force pushes the system and the remnant attracts the system.
Unless there's been some serious mistranslation, I'd suggest the author has no idea what he's talking about. The second statement is almost entirely nonsensical.
The 12 I believe, consists of the two dimensions of time and my belief comes from my book on philosophy and not from my paper.
If any further proof were needed...

vx220
10-13-06, 01:41 AM
heh, look at this, he did A LOT of calculations

http://www.cerglobal.org/graphics/Nikos1.pdf