Published May 15, 2022 | Version v1
Preprint Open

Unipositional Interpretation Of Quantum Mechanics Explains Relativistic Time Dilation, Updates Cosmology

Authors/Creators

  • 1. Member of ResearchGate and ORCID, Certificates in Astrophysics from ANU (Australian National University), Certificates in Robotics from QUT (Queensland University of Technology, Australia)

Description

Understanding the universe requires Quantum Gravity – the union of Quantum Mechanics with General Relativity, Einstein’s theory of Gravity. This article doesn’t know how to do that. There are innumerable requirements in a valid theory of quantum gravity. The article’s purpose is to propose a meeting place for a few of those necessities – the updating of cosmology through a suggested new interpretation of quantum mechanics called “unipositional”, from the Latin ūnus meaning one. Some elements in development of this article are holography, Wick rotation, electronics’ BITS or binary digits, Mobius strips, and immersed (not embedded) figure-8 Klein bottles that are simply-connected. Along the way – space, mass, and time are united in an eternal present, while vector-tensor-scalar geometry is summarized and used to explore dark matter, dark energy, the Higgs boson, the Higgs field, the weak and strong nuclear forces, as well as cosmological readshift - re(tarded) ad(vanced) shift – together with formation of planets and black holes. The finish writes of Virtual Reality, Augmented Reality, and Unipositional Quantum Mechanics being utilized to display the ultimate paradox – creation of something that has always existed (and always will): the static infinite universe, which has no Big Bang or Multiverse and neither expands nor contracts spatially or temporally.

Notes

Ken Drinkwater, Doctor of Philosophy at Manchester Metropolitan University in England, and the author exchanged a few comments regarding this paper on ResearchGate @ https://www.researchgate.net/messages/90815420. I (the author) would like to share these PUBLIC comments which I found very gratifying and intriguing - Ken Drinkwater to you 3 days ago Hi Rodney, thanks for sharing this. A really enlightening piece of research. Many Thanks, Ken Rodney Bartlett 3 days ago Thank you very much for calling that enlightening research, Ken. When I wrote that, it gave me the most extraordinary feeling. It felt like my whole life had come together in that article. I think most scientists might regard looking thousands of years ahead as unrealistic, and would judge "creation of something that has always existed" to be nonsense. I guess that's why we need philosophy. However, I don't really feel as though I can take credit for writing it. I believe everything on Earth, in space, and in time is united into one thing. All ideas have always existed, and always will. The best anyone can ever do is select appropriate ideas that are forever accessible to everyone in the entire past, present, or future - then put them together like the pieces in a jigsaw puzzle. Ken Drinkwater to you 2 days ago Indeed Rodney, there are always many more questions than answers. BW Ken.

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