Essays on Cosmology and Quantum Mechanics Einstein versus Copenhagen |
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Author:
| Neuzil, Jeffrey Scott |
ISBN: | 978-1-4499-9743-4 |
Publication Date: | Dec 2009 |
Publisher: | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $18.36 |
Book Description:
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This series of writings is the result of some ten year's study of cosmology and particle physics. The main essay "Quantum Cosmology and the Riemann Hypothesis" is a detailed exposition of the views of Albert Einstein as contrasted with Heisenberg and Bohr: It seeks to show under what conditions Einstien's so called "principle of realism" holds; it argues that the Standard Model is absolutely correct, but that a deeper, logico-emperical approach to quantum theory will supplement this...
More DescriptionThis series of writings is the result of some ten year's study of cosmology and particle physics. The main essay "Quantum Cosmology and the Riemann Hypothesis" is a detailed exposition of the views of Albert Einstein as contrasted with Heisenberg and Bohr: It seeks to show under what conditions Einstien's so called "principle of realism" holds; it argues that the Standard Model is absolutely correct, but that a deeper, logico-emperical approach to quantum theory will supplement this model, just as Einstein's theory of gravitation supplemented Newton's theory. I have devoted the book to essays I have written, as a layman not a professionally trained physicist, some of which are dedicated to an exposition of certain concepts in the quantum theory. Heisenberg's "Uncertainty" relation is discussed, and I provide an interpretation of Einstein's energy mass relation, and how it may be the "essential pulse" of the atomic nuclei: this model explains the electron as "periodicity" not continuity, which explains the deep reason for Heisenberg's "uncertainty principle. The book aims to provide the foundations for the solution to the Riemann Hypothesis by identifying the pulse of the hydrogen atom as the particle and anti-particle geometry generated by the atom's motion. The essay referred to above has implications for a nascent field of technology and particle theory, Quantum computing.