What Drives the Quest to Uncover the Origins of Mass, Energy, Time, and Charge?

Ken_S
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How did you find PF?
Found physicsforums.com with a Google Search for neutrino polarization.
Studying physics and related topics for 3 decades. Working on a project to better understand the origin of mass, energy, time and charge.
 
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Welcome to PF, Ken. :smile:
 
Ken_S said:
How did you find PF?: Found physicsforums.com with a Google Search for neutrino polarization.

Working on a project to better understand the origin of mass, energy, time and charge.
For general technical questions, post them in the appropriate technical forum (start the thread by filling out the form at the top of the forum) and include links to your reading that you've been doing and ask questions about that reading. In some of the technical forums the thread title will include a prefix that you can set to B/I/A for Beginner/Intermediate/Advanced for the level that you would like the replies to be. I is undergraduate university level, and A is graduate school level and above. :smile:
 
I am retired with a scientific background in Mathematics and Physics though I quit Academia after graduation. Recently, my interest has revived and I have started to review what I knew before and learn new stuff. My interests are in Physics and Mathematical Physics. I hope I can find answers to some of my questions here and perhaps in the future, I can also answers some questions. How have I arrived here? During the past two months, I have been doing some online research to find the best...
I began teaching high school math and physics after graduating LSU in 1975. I taught in public, Catholic, and prep schools for about 30 years. During my career, computers entered the schools for the first time and I became deeply involved. For a while I wrote educational software through my own company. After I retired from teaching I continued online tutoring for a few years. I am now using my last few years creating the Physics Teacher's Tool Box, a resource culled from my long career.
Hi everyone, I'm just a physics enthusiast. I took some first-year courses a long time ago, but I wasn't able to continue, so I don't have a degree. Still, I'm really passionate about the subject and try to keep up with it as much as I can. I mostly study in my (limited) free time, going through books I didn’t get the chance to read when I was younger. Thanks for your attention!