josephmbasile

joined 3 weeks ago
 

Hi folks, I just finished my first complete desktop application today and so I'm doing a bit sharing this morning. This program is called FOIA(s), and its an advanced mail-merge designed to help advocates and professionals in the United States generate FOIA requests for discovery in ongoing court cases. I made this program with folks like you in mind, because I think you're folks who care about truth and justice. Let go find some. Thanks

 

Hi folks. I know a lot of you are worried about what's happening to our country right now, and although it's okay to be worried, it's a lot more productive to do something about it. On that note, I wanted to share an open source program I just finished called FOIA(s) and I wanted to get feedback from the community on any suggestions or bugs that you find. Keep your heads up! Thanks everyone

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

Very nice! The Permittivity of Free Space is doing a handstand and would like a word with you.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 1 week ago

Also did you ladies and fellas know that y=x^x is the ace of spades?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

How many digits of Pi would you have to read for you to be able to reconstruct all of the information in the Universe up to this moment?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Nah I replied to someone else with a similar thought. The Notorious Fibs sure I agree with you they are new information, similar to the primes but just adding +1 over an over again or even some repeating pattern doesn't add new information beyond the initial pattern.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 week ago

True although I would like to note that the digits of Pi are the heart of r-n jesus and the number line just does boring stuff like steadily increasing forever.

[–] [email protected] -3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Is one of them something other than information?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

Does the set of all sets contain the Universe?

 

They're probably the only things that "create" information in the sense that you can always grab another slice. Thank you delicious pi!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 weeks ago

On particle decay, we can only measure decay which is the delta between gravitons emitted vs gravitons absorbed, thus decay would be faster far away from other masses. Decay is also limited by how small a graviton can be. It must be many orders of magnitude smaller than the particle it is emitted from in order for decay to be undetectable by us.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Thank you for your reply my friendly toaster! I'll go through your points but I appreciate the thoughtful discussion.

My background is in engineering, specifically computational fluid dynamics. I have a hard time understanding how I'm supposed to simulate an infinitesimal yet nearly infinite mass a t=0 with no grid. Doesn't work, and it's not that I don't like the Big Bang theory, it's clearly on the right track, but as you said it's clearly incomplete. Same with Einstein, yes he modeled spacetime as a flexible medium, but that's because he was observing the behavior of particles, he was not directly observing spacetime itself.

I don't mean that a particle is intelligent like a person, but it seeks to survive like a bacterium, or an insect, or a piece of self replicating code. You're correct "propagate" wasn't really the right word, I was thinking more of photons for that. Survive is more like it. They do things that decrease decay like absorbing more gravitons by being near other masses.

When you accelerate a particle, all the parts of the particle have to move along with whatever wave structure is inside of it. So the whole pattern has to move along the grid and as a result the interaction of the particles themselves has to slow down, thus you get time dilation. Basically, the particles are like little computers and if you give them too much to do they run slower.

Anyway I don't expect people to give these theories a fair shot because the Michaelson Morely experiment still needs to be repeated in hard vacuum before the truth of it dawns on people. And who knows perhaps the grid really isn't there as you say.

Going back to high school physics, one of the first things you should remember is that everything is only a theory and if you assume something is true, like a curvature of spacetime, you may miss the bigger picture in front of you.

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Do gravitons exist? (lemmy.world)
submitted 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Just musing here, I've been a proponent of new ether theories the past few years and so there's some assumptions that go into this.

  1. Spacetime is a fixed grid with planck-length-cubed voxels.
  2. Information can travel through the grid at 1 planck-length per planck-second.
  3. Particles evolve from this grid to perform some function, typically related to self-propagation.

I would posit that the big bang theory makes no sense. A tiny spec of everything which may or may not be finite just kinda gesundheit's itself into existence for no particular reason and then sputters out over trillions of years.

Nah I'm with Max Tegmark, we're an information set, since everything in physics really boils down to information anyhow. What makes more sense to me is if the big bang is instead a white hole, spewing information from some source of random information, possibly the digits of pi or some such.

Back to ether theory, the Permittivity of Free Space can be looked at as the inverse and called the "Electric Tension" [Roychoudhuri 2021]. This is the fundamental resistance of space to accept new information, and conducting Roychoudhuri's experiment (Michelson/Morely in hard vacuum) could verify that this is indeed the bedrock of reality.

So back to a graviton, what would it need to do?

  1. Undetectable. The graviton must be smaller than a photon and much smaller than an electron. The diameter of an electron seems to be 10^20 Planck-Lengths.

  2. Emitted from all massive particles.

  3. Carries information about where the massive particle that emitted it is.

  4. Collides with larger particles, with the negative direction vector being the source of the emission.

So what about the particles? Well an electron is ~~(10^20)^3~~ 10^20-cubed voxels, so there is room for extremely complex structures in there, and I would posit that massive particles (and photons) exhibit intelligence and try to survive. What would they use gravitons for?

  1. Emitting gravitons causes the particle to decay. Absorbing gravitons prevents this decay, therefore it is advantageous for the particles to move close together, as this increases the absorption of gravitons.

  2. The direction vectors of incoming gravitions are summed up and the direction with the most mass is where the particle tries to go.

So what do you think? Do gravitons exist? If they do they're basically the particles shooting spit balls at each other. We can talk about time dilation next.