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Physics
Beyond the Standard Models
What is new with Koide sum rules?
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[QUOTE="CarlB, post: 6504963, member: 26624"] Update: So I had sent the above paper to arXiv and the idiots put it "on hold" for "moderation". Of course there was no explanation. I would think that the abstract alone was enough to make it an important paper. It was there for 3 weeks and I couldn't do anything with it, just had to wait and get steadily more angry. Finally it got through moderation and was announced to be out in the next release but they had also given me back the "X" button so I deleted it. If my paper is junk it doesn't matter and if it's great they can damn well pay me for it or see people get it off of Vixra. And at Foundations of Physics, it is still "reviewers assigned" but they updated the date from June 6 to June 17th IIRC. I'm guessing that someone waved off a review and got replaced so I'm taking that as they are working on it. If they managed to make 3 months without accepting or rejecting it I will surprise them by suddenly pulling it out and publishing it at JMP which has, like Vixra, always treated me nicely and quickly. Finally, I'm writing a guest post for a popular blog. I'm going to blame the whole thing on Steven Weinberg's observation that density matrices have more general symmetries than state vectors. Since the Standard Model depends on temperature (that is, the SU(2) is a high temperature limit thing and is broken by electric charge at low temperatures) and since density matrices cover thermodynamics much better than state vectors, it is imperative that the density matrix symmetries be understood enough to see if they can be used to organize the Standard Model. That's basically what my paper does, but the objective of the blog is to define the possibility that there is some treasure to be dug in that region (in the event mine has an error or isn't the right way). [/QUOTE]
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Beyond the Standard Models
What is new with Koide sum rules?
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