#11339
AaronB
Participant

Good thinking! I don’t think it’s crazy at all because it matches what I think. 🙂 To further your thoughts, the quarks that make up a neutron or proton ARE the superimposed and interacting waves. The waves are caught in a stable, inter-precessing, harmonic grip. To go further, the trapped waves concentrate the space-time fabric, since waves have more surface length than flat lines, which pulls surrounding fabric toward it just a little bit. Therefore, if any two particles exist, the fabric directly between them is shorter and tighter than the surrounding ambient fabric. This creates a gradient, which is or causes the force called gravity. The ratio of that gradient increases as the particles approach each other. To go further, space-time fabric has a natural speed of wave propagation in a vacuum (area without mass particles to mess it up). But in a space where there is a super-concentrated amount of mass, the relative ambient fabric itself is pulled tighter, so the speed of propagation goes up (c is not constant). So, you can have a super-concentrated mass without a singularity (ie. no black holes or other impossible event-horizon craziness). To get a bit more speculative, the chirality of the waves that made the primordial particle set the stage for the matter-antimatter asymmetry since the EMR waves that left the particle to interact elsewhere in space had consistently one-directional angular momentum (polarized light). The primordial particle was the instability that “seeded” the rest of the universe. Instead of a big bang, it was the “little pop” in an otherwise lonely universe that started the subsequent avalanche into what we have now. Gravity eventually concentrated the hydrogen, creating a higher level instability, a star, which led to higher order atoms and energy concentration. The first supernova brought the next instability and even higher-order atoms about. And on and on in a fractal/Fibonacci kind of growth.

To build a matter-to-energy converter, I suppose you’d have to get the quark waves to come out of harmonic precession somehow. Throw a Planck wrench into it and let the gears fly!

Fine print: These are my own ideas and opinions, and do not necessarily represent the opinions or views of anyone or anything else. If someone else already thought of them or wrote about them, I’m unaware of it, but so be it. If these ideas are completely wrong, I reserve the right to change my mind at any future time, or to hold onto them for as long as I want.