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Chemical Cosmology 2010 ed. [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 419 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 1008 g, XVII, 419 p., 1 Hardback
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Sep-2010
  • Leidėjas: Springer
  • ISBN-10: 9048138272
  • ISBN-13: 9789048138272
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 419 pages, aukštis x plotis: 235x155 mm, weight: 1008 g, XVII, 419 p., 1 Hardback
  • Išleidimo metai: 06-Sep-2010
  • Leidėjas: Springer
  • ISBN-10: 9048138272
  • ISBN-13: 9789048138272
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The composition of the most remote objects brought into view by the Hubble telescope can no longer be reconciled with the nucleogenesis of standard cosmology and the alternative explanation, in terms of the -Cold-Dark-Matter model, has no recognizable chemical basis. A more rational scheme, based on the chemistry and periodicity of atomic matter, opens up an exciting new interpretation of the cosmos in terms of projective geometry and general relativity.



The response of atomic structure to environmental pressure predicts non-Doppler cosmical redshifts and equilibrium nucleogenesis by ­-particle addition, in accord with observed periodic variation of nuclear abundance.



Inferred cosmic self similarity elucidates the Bode Titius law, general commensurability in the solar system and the occurrence of quantum phenomena on a cosmic scale.



The generalized periodic function involves both matter and anti-matter in an involuted mapping to a closed projective plane. This topology ensures the same symmetrical balance in a chiral universe, wrapped around an achiral vacuum interface, without singularities.



A new cosmology emerges, based on the theory of projective relativ­ity, presented here as a translation of Veblens original German text. Not only does it provide a unification of gravity, electromagnetism and quantum theory, through gauge invariance, but also supports the solution of the gravitational field equations, obtained by Gödel for a rotating universe.



The appearance of an EinsteinRosen bridge as outlet from a black hole, into conjugate anti-space, accounts for globular clusters, quasars, cosmic radiation, -ray bursters, pulsars, radio sources and other re­gions of plasma activity.



The effects of a multiply-connected space-time manifold on observa­tions in an Euclidean tangent space are unpredictable and a complete re-assessment of the size and structure ofthe universe is indicated.



The target readership includes scientists, as well as non-scientists everybody with a scientific or philosophical interest in cosmology and, especially those cosmologists and mathematicians with the ability to recast the crude ideas presented here into appropriate mathematical models.
1 Introductory Synopsis
1.1 Cosmological Riddles
2(3)
1.1.1 Chirality
2(1)
1.1.2 Self-similarity
3(1)
1.1.3 Dark Matter
4(1)
1.1.4 Singularities
5(1)
1.2 Authority in Science
5(2)
1.3 Geometry and Number
7(2)
1.4 Physical Theory
9(7)
1.4.1 Special Relativity
9(2)
1.4.2 General Relativity
11(4)
1.4.3 Quantum Theory
15(1)
1.5 Chemical Cosmology
16(2)
1.6 Projective Relativity
18(4)
1.7 References
22(1)
2 History
2.1 Introduction
23(4)
2.1.1 A Heliocentric Model
25(2)
2.2 The Almagest
27(1)
2.3 Medieval Cosmology
28(6)
2.3.1 Johannes Kepler
30(2)
2.3.2 Galileo
32(2)
2.4 The Mechanical Universe
34(5)
2.4.1 Descartes
34(1)
2.4.2 Newton
35(4)
2.5 Cosmic Evolution
39(4)
2.6 An Expanding Universe
43(3)
2.7 References
46(2)
3 World Geometry
3.1 Affine Geometry
48(6)
3.1.1 Affine Lattices
52(2)
3.2 Projective Geometry
54(24)
3.2.1 Projective Space
57(1)
3.2.2 Barycentric Coordinates
58(1)
3.2.3 Linear Transformation
59(1)
3.2.4 Projective Coordinates
60(1)
3.2.5 Theorems of Projective Geometry
61(3)
3.2.6 Projectivity
64(4)
3.2.7 Quadrangular Sets
68(2)
3.2.8 Involution
70(1)
3.2.9 Conics
71(2)
3.2.10 Collineation and Correlation
73(1)
3.2.11 The Algebra of Points
74(4)
3.3 Complex Geometry
78(1)
3.4 Topology
79(6)
3.4.1 Connectivity
84(1)
3.4.2 Fixed Points
84(1)
3.5 Golden Geometry
85(5)
3.5.1 The Fibonacci Series
86(1)
3.5.2 Self-similarity
87(1)
3.5.3 The Golden Spiral
87(1)
3.5.4 Platonic Solids
88(2)
3.6 Differential Geometry
90(10)
3.6.1 Tensor Analysis
93(4)
3.6.2 Riemannian Geometry
97(3)
3.7 References
100(2)
4 Physical Evidence
4.1 Special Relativity
102(8)
4.2 General Relativity
110(3)
4.3 Unified Fields
113(6)
4.3.1 The Gauge Principle
113(3)
4.3.2 Kaluza-Klein Theory
116(1)
4.3.3 Einstein's Alternatives
117(2)
4.4 Quantum Theory
119(11)
4.4.1 The Seminal Ideas
119(1)
4.4.2 The Planetary Model
120(2)
4.4.3 Wave Mechanics
122(4)
4.4.4 Bohmian Mechanics
126(3)
4.4.5 Antimatter
129(1)
4.5 The Vacuum
130(6)
4.5.1 Interaction Theory
132(4)
4.6 Astrophysics
136(5)
4.6.1 Spectroscopy
136(1)
4.6.2 Cosmic Rays
137(1)
4.6.3 Radio Galaxies
138(1)
4.6.4 Quasars
139(2)
4.7 References
141(2)
5 Chemical Evidence
5.1 Chemistry and Cosmology
143(3)
5.2 Periodicity
146(11)
5.2.1 Cosmic Implications
154(1)
5.2.2 Chemical Redshifts
155(2)
5.3 Self-Similarity
157(10)
5.3.1 The Solar System
158(5)
5.3.2 Universal Symmetry
163(2)
5.3.3 Quantized Redshifts
165(2)
5.4 Nucleogenesis
167(13)
5.4.1 The Alternative Models
167(7)
5.4.2 The New ACDM Model
174(2)
5.4.3 The Periodic Model
176(2)
5.4.4 Nuclear Abundance
178(2)
5.5 References
180(4)
6 Standard Cosmology
6.1 Solution of the Field Equations
184(2)
6.1.1 The Black Hole
185(1)
6.2 Einstein's Universe
186(3)
6.3 De Sitter's Solution
189(2)
6.4 Friedmann's Generalization
191(2)
6.5 Mach's Principle
193(1)
6.6 The Expanding Universe
194(3)
6.6.1 Galactic Redshifts and Hubble's Law
195(2)
6.7 The Big Bang
197(24)
6.7.1 Particle Physics
208(1)
6.7.2 Big-bang Nucleogenesis
209(2)
6.7.3 Microwave Background
211(2)
6.7.4 Inflation
213(1)
6.7.5 Cosmological Constant
214(3)
6.7.6 Anti-matter
217(1)
6.7.7 Dark Matter
217(2)
6.7.8 The Anthropic Principle
219(2)
6.8 State of the Art
221(3)
6.9 References
224(5)
7 Relativistic Cosmology
7.1 Induced-Matter Theory
229(1)
7.2 A Rotating Universe
230(8)
7.2.1 The Cosmological Model
234(1)
7.2.2 Chronometric Redshifts
235(3)
7.3 Projective Relativity
238(3)
7.4 The Steady State
241(3)
7.4.1 Universal Self Similarity
242(2)
7.5 References
244(3)
8 Reasoned Alternatives
8.1 Alternative Perspectives
247(28)
8.1.1 Quantum Potential in the Vacuum
247(5)
8.1.2 The Vacuum Interface
252(1)
8.1.3 Cosmic Dispersal of Matter
253(5)
8.1.4 Quasars and Radio Sources
258(3)
8.1.5 Redshifts Revisited
261(10)
8.1.6 Hubble's Constant
271(1)
8.1.7 The Distance Scale
272(2)
8.1.8 Quasar Redshifts
274(1)
8.2 Alternative Cosmologies
275(10)
8.2.1 Size of the Cosmos
276(2)
8.2.2 Plasma Cosmology
278(2)
8.2.3 The Self-Similar Cosmological Model
280(3)
8.2.4 Population III Cosmology
283(1)
8.2.5 Conclusion
284(1)
8.3 References
285(4)
9 The Big Picture
9.1 Introduction
289(1)
9.2 Magic, Religion and Science
290(10)
9.2.1 The Babylonian World
292(1)
9.2.2 The Modern World
293(7)
9.3 The Natural World
300(10)
9.3.1 Space-Time
300(2)
9.3.2 The Vacuum
302(1)
9.3.3 The Periodicity of Atomic Matter
303(1)
9.3.4 The Topology of Space-Time
304(2)
9.3.5 Mathematical Model
306(2)
9.3.6 Cosmic Self-similarity
308(1)
9.3.7 The Physical World
309(1)
9.4 A Man-sized Universe
310(4)
9.5 References
314(87)
A Projective Relativity Theory
B The Gauge Principle
C Abstracts
C.1 Introductory Synopsis
401(1)
C.2 History
401(1)
C.3 World Geometry
402(1)
C.4 Physical Evidence
402(1)
C.5 Chemical Evidence
403(1)
C.6 Standard Cosmology
404(1)
C.7 Relativistic Cosmology
405(1)
C.8 Reasoned Alternatives
405(1)
C.9 The Big Picture
406
Index