Hawking Forum Post 33288


Subject: Compressible Photons?!
Date: March 25, 2001
Poster: Samuel A. (Sam) Cox 3:55PM PNI Time

Hi:

Thanks. Writing, especially about scientific subjects is something I enjoy, but it is a real challenge too! Thanks also for your careful reading of my conceptual work. "Compressed photons"?! How is the ultimately infinitesimally small, but not quite zero photon "compressible"? This is a good question!

First, by compressed, I mean the same thing as when we discuss compressing air...bringing photons, like molecules closer together so that they eventually clump in larger quantities at some universal coordinates, more than others.

These differences, which create the reality we perceive, are not detectable at the "speed of light". From that frame the universe seems uniform, and the dimension we call time, is not identifiable.

Photon clumps viewed from a sourcing or observing 4D frame of reference are our material world. There is a definite proportion always present in the relationship between the material particulate world and the energy based world of cosmic reality. This relationship is E=mc squared.

Photon clumps are ultimately, but not necessarily macroscopically perceived in 4D as "particles". However, these particles; photons organized around singularity, make atoms and create the world of "physical reality"...valence, chemical properties, phases of matter at varying microscopic "speed" of particle movement etc.

The singularity in all space unifies cosmic reality. Its proximity in space/time to any given coordinate on the hyperspheres is affected by the presence of matter in a direct/inverse proportionate relationship creating the 4D effect we perceive from our location in time as "gravity".

Mathematically, the only substance in the universe capable of holding, "compressing" and organizing photons in the form we recognize as matter is singularity. Singularity is all around us, everywhere and nowhere. Even though we are founded upon it, we, at a macroscopic scale are removed from it in cosmological time.

Looking toward the microscopic antipode (actually 2), we encounter the Planck realm where by definition, the distinction between matter and singularity progressively blurs until we meet that great (almost) coordinate intersection everywhere...C(0+)...NOT a geometric point, but a two sphere...the foundation of the 7D universe- in amorphous singularity- the "bounce point". The submicroscopic antipode is everywhere you can point a microscope- yet almost nowhere!

At the other end of scale, but also everywhere and nowhere in the cosmos is the "big bang" (actually 2). Its coordinates are at the opposite antipode of the universe...the astronomical antipode...the opposite end of the linear dimension we call "time". We are located at coordinates in between antipodes, and are protected from their singular effects by our distance in time from them.

Yet when we look back in time at the stars, we see a universe dominated NOT by a big bang, but "black holes"- and ultimately a black hole, everywhere and nowhere! We originated not only from a Big Bang, but the everywhere, nowhere "big bang"/"Black hole" which is the source of our eternal existence in 7D. Foundational 7D is the reason for the eternal stability of our reality...and it completes Einstein's mathematical concept.

Charlie B. spoke of the sum of the moments in a building as equal to zero. To be more precise, the sum of the moments in a building must be zero or it will come down! We live in a universe where the sum of the moments is almost, but not quite zero- even in 7D! This condition is created by the fact that the mass of the universe is not infinite- and it introduces the Second Law of Thermodynamics with its implication that at some time in the future, all we know will shatter. We in 4D detect this not quite infinite reality of the universe as "momentum".

It is a fact worth pondering, that the very mechanism (our universes finite, and fine tuned mass with the accompanying perceived GR momentum; time space and energy "change") which threatens our existence is the key to making life as we know and understand it possible. In an infinite universe we would be frogs encased in plastic cubes! No movement, no change, no possibilities for change- and no threat of destruction, would exist.

However, life in our universe of finite mass comes to the rescue! It loads the dice just enough by a process we call "conciousness" to keep our reality gradually moving away from disorder toward increasing order, and it probably (no it HAS...look at the phyla of living things even we can observe!) has created a plethora of ways the universe can be observed and experienced.

We live in a dual, eternal universe. See you the next time around!

Best Wishes, Sam Cox

  Appendix D  

 

© 2000 Samuel Cox