PDA

View Full Version : Global Scaling Theory


bunny
03-November-2004, 03:43 PM
I have just re-read a fascinating article in Nexus magazine on GST.

Here (http://www.aw-verlag.ch/Global-Scaling/Global-Scaling-Theory.htm) is a link to the papers.

Just to summarize some of the parts;

Basic gist is to work with a natural log scale rather than linear scale.
On the logarithmic line of scales there are 'attractive' and 'repulsive' segments.

Hence, predicting primes is notoriously difficult (general consensus is that they are random). If you reduce the numbers to a logarithmic scale, primes will tend to clump in a determinable way.

The existence of a standing density wave in logarithmic space explains the reason for gravity. The global flow of matter in the direction of the nodes gives rise to the attractive property of gravity.

A standing pressure wave in logarithmic space is responsible for the fractal and scale-invariant distribution of matter and is the cause of all physical interactions and forces.

Standing waves for instantaneous information transmission. (can't quite figure how you would set that up.)




The claims are wide ranging. Some of the information was already known to mathmaticians in the distant past, but here it is collated and predictions made which are worthy of discussion.

StarLab
03-November-2004, 07:18 PM
I agree. Complexities are more predictable with logs. Also, fundamental stuff like the ideal gas constant is often associated with logarithmic equations.

Paul21
04-November-2004, 01:19 PM
Thank you for the interesting link Bunny. Everyone who seeks scale invariance is on the right track and will sooner or later add new chapter to the physics textbooks.