Well, I am COMPLETELY against M-Theory and such

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around a participant's unconventional theories regarding fundamental forces, particularly electromagnetism, gravity, weak force, and strong force. The scope includes theoretical physics and speculative ideas about the nature of these forces and their interactions with matter and antimatter.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant proposes that electromagnetism consists of two forces: gravity, which attracts all, and an unspecified repulsive force, referred to as "x force."
  • The same participant suggests that charges arise from an imbalance between gravitational pull and the x force, leading to the formation of particles.
  • Another claim is that the weak force consists of energy packets exchanged between particles, affecting their mass according to Einstein's equation.
  • There is a suggestion that the strong force is equivalent to pure gravity, with protons counteracting this force through the x force.
  • A hypothesis is presented that gravity operates through waves that attract matter and repel antimatter, potentially linking to the nature of antimatter as "packets of antienergy."
  • Participants question the proposed theories, particularly regarding the interactions of gravity with antimatter and the binding of particles like positronium, challenging the coherence of the initial claims.
  • Another participant asserts that gravity does not hold electrons to protons, suggesting that electromagnetic forces are responsible for atomic structure, while strong force is described as holding protons and neutrons together through quark interactions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views, with some supporting the initial theories and others challenging their validity. There is no consensus on the proposed ideas, and multiple competing perspectives are present regarding the nature of fundamental forces.

Contextual Notes

Some claims rely on unconventional interpretations of established physics concepts, and there are unresolved questions about the interactions between matter and antimatter, as well as the roles of different forces in atomic structure.

IooqXpooI
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But here is a help for you guys...My mad ramblings on what I came up with just recently.;)

E-Magnetism:

I think that Electromagnetism is just two forces put together in one category. Gravity attracts all, and another force repels all.

Since you can never have a purity between the Gravitational pull being givien off, and the x force(repulsion force) being given off, you get charges. - is more Gravity, and + is more x force. The + is attracted to the x force because it wants to be even, and balanced...Otherwise it would (somehow) break down into three balanced particles.

Weak Force:

Weak force is only energy packets in the form of waves being given off as communication to other particles. The energy packets are not charged, and each time energy packets are given off, the one that gives them off loses mass (I am accepting einstein's e=mc^2) equal to the energy given off divided by the speed of light.

The one that gets the packet gains energy equal to the energy received divided by the speed of light.

Weak force only occurs between patrticles of different mass, to even each other out.

Strong Force:

Strong force is pure Gravity. The center of the nucleus is actually the one that gives off the gravity, because it is pure. The 'protons' counteract it by having an excess of x force. Therefore, in antiatoms, the center must give off pure x force, with the 'protons' charged with an excess of gravity.

Gravity:

Either you accept my original Electromagnetism theory, or you can go with this one.

Gravity is just waves being given off to pull another object closer, with space-time(dimension) acting as an aether, it attracts matter and pushes antimatter away. X force, I guess, is the opposite, and the waves are pushing the matter away, while attracting the antimatter.

Also, could antimatter be packets of antienergy with the opposite of all of these theories?

Give me feedback on this...Please.
 
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Hopefully Dr. Michio Kaku won't steal this idea...;)
 
You're saying gravity is the only attractive force, and there is some other force that repels everything? That gravity is the only attractive force and that it attracts matter but repels antimatter?

If that is what you're saying then how would your theory account for the experimentally observed positronium state which is comprised of an electron and a positron (it's antiparticle) bound in a similar way to the hydrogen atom? Since gravity cannot be keeping these two together and the other force is repulsive it cannot exist.
 
Maybe gravity attracts matter, and ignores anti matter. Maybe this is how matter keeps itself together; and how anti-matter keeps itself together. Maybe anti-matter, is just other-matter. (gravity's ex-girlfriend).
 
darkbob well as far as i understand it, gravity 'doesnt' hold electrons to protons, etc. there's some kind of sub-atomic bond by their charges or whatever that is causing them to stay together. so wether he's right or wrong it wouldn't matter.
 
Electrons are held to the nuclei of atoms by electromagnetism, basically the electrons have minus electric charge and the nuclei have as many positive units as the nucleus has protons, so the atome will have as many electrons as protons in its rest state.

Protons and neutrons in the nucleus are held together by the Stong Force, which is described by the QCD theory, part of the Standard Model. Basically the components of the proton and neutron, which are up and down quarks, exchange gluons according to the QCD physics.
 
Hopefully Dr. Michio Kaku won't steal this idea...;)

I wouldn't worry too much about that :wink:
 

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