Chapter 1 - Introduction to
Wave Theory
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God does not play dice . . .
Albert Einstein
This is a beautiful, marvellous, unbelievable, ingenious
creation -
there is only one.
Chaim Henry Fima Tejman
Our universe was created from one energetic matter (force)
that, since the Big Bang, has inflationary properties. By
swirling movement, it creates
swirls . . .galaxies . . . stars . . . planets . . . atoms
. . . disintegrates into photons and . . . and once more creates
a space of concentrated energetic matter . . .
which may be the source of a new life cycle.
Everything that happens is the result of the behaviour of
this single energetic matter. Its swirling movement enables
it to push, expand and create swirls that, within their space,
have pulling properties.
To understand the unbelievable behaviour of energetic matter
and its life cycle, let us follow this explanation step by
step:
In the universe, it appears that different energy levels -
spaces of energetic concentration - are the source of the
energetic swirls that were precursors for the Big Bang. Wave
theory deals with energetic creations after the Big Bang.
The behaviour of this matter is ingeniously simple, but its
creations are very complex formations beyond our imagination.
In this essay, I present facts known in physics, as well as
ideas only partially explained in that field. Wave theory,
in comparison to other theories, is only a framework. It is
the first step to a grand united nature theory that can help
us to understand the laws of nature, to generate new ideas
and to contribute to research.
Wave theory explains and connects theories such as those of
Einstein, Darwin and quantum mechanics with every formation
of matter, even living matter and thought.
As Lavoisier’s theory ascribed changes in weight in
chemical reactions “to absorption or loss of air”
(an invisible substance) and proposed the name “oxygen,”
so wave theory claims that an (as yet) invisible substance,
energetic matter appearing in swirls, is the basic matter
which creates the universe and everything in it.
Einstein suggested that to reach a better understanding of
the laws of nature and the universe, a more sophisticated
approach is required, and perhaps he was right. His ideas
and equations changed our attitude to physics; wave theory
continues to do so, but gets closer to the behaviour of nature.
Until now, research about the universe has been done mainly
by physicists, astronomers and mathematicians, who did it
brilliantly; however, from time to time they lose sight of
the fact that the same rules described by Darwin for the “living
world” also apply to the universe (nature) as a whole,
because it is the same matter (Stephen Hawking, The Illustrated
A Brief History of Time, Bantam Books, November 1996).
In this book, I will attempt to present a nature-oriented
approach to understanding the universe.
Early in the twentieth century, astronomers observed that
new star formations appear in pairs (see picture, left). Pictures
obtained by various telescopic observations
show this clearly. In some pictures, we see the expulsion
of a group of masses that look like discs connected by a stream
of gas. These discs are pro-stars. They are like condensed
clouds (waves); they are not yet
globular and there is a great deal of gas between and around
them. Their inner structure is similar (without internal differentiation)
and they move one after the other in face position with the
same distance and the same rotation (picture, right).
Spaces between discs are connected by shadowy, undefined
gas formations in horizontal positions.
In another picture, we see another kind of star formation:
a pair of discs, the larger of
the two rotating in one direction, and the smaller one rotating
in the opposite direction (picture, right).
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Dr. Chaim Tejman, Copyright©
2001. All rights reserved.
[Index]
[Introduction]
[Summary] [Wave
Formation] [Photons] [Gravitation]
[Time]
[Atoms] [Life]
[Cancer] [Fundamental
Force] [Gender/Why Sex?]
[Sexual Reproduction]
[Schrodinger & Heisenberg]
[Creation] [Supernova]
[Dark
Matter & Astronomy] [Speed
of Light] [Cloud Formations]
[Natural Disasters] [Global
Warming] [Thermodynamics]
[Backward Time] [Quantum
Mechanics] [Compton Effect]
[Equations] [Predictions]
[Academic Correspondences] [Contact]
[Links] [Mysteries] |