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The exhaustive review of the primary sources of theoretical physics undertaken in my previous books has revealed major problems which persist to the present day. These can be seen to be largely related to inconsistencies between Einstein's theories of Special and General Relativity and quantum mechanics and the consequent inability to quantize Einstein's relativistic field equations. Of particular concern is the fact that most of the so-called elementary particles in the Standard Model are largely derived from extremely high energy collisions between protons, have very short half-lives,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The exhaustive review of the primary sources of theoretical physics undertaken in my previous books has revealed major problems which persist to the present day. These can be seen to be largely related to inconsistencies between Einstein's theories of Special and General Relativity and quantum mechanics and the consequent inability to quantize Einstein's relativistic field equations. Of particular concern is the fact that most of the so-called elementary particles in the Standard Model are largely derived from extremely high energy collisions between protons, have very short half-lives, between two one millionths and less than one million billion billionth of a second, and have masses derived almost entirely from interaction energy, making the Standard Model appear more like a theory of mass creation in high energy physics than a theory of elementary particles. As Dirac noted in his 1933 Nobel Lecture: "To get an interpretation of some modern experimental results one must suppose that particles can be created and annihilated. Thus, if a particle is observed to come out from another particle, one can no longer be sure that the latter is composite. The former may have been created." Part I examines the foundational assumptions of the Standard Model and Part II sets out the corresponding foundational assumptions of New Physics. Both include the corresponding annotated primary source documents. In Part III, they are brought together under each heading to highlight the differences.
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Autorenporträt
Trevor Underwood was born in England in 1943, and became a US citizen in 2004. He earned a M.A. in mathematics and physics at Cambridge University, in 1965, and a M.Sc. in economics at the London School of Economics in 1967, followed by further graduate studies at the University of Rochester, NY, and at Harvard University, between 1967 and 1969. He worked for the Bank of England, the International Monetary Fund, and the UK Treasury and was a UK Advisor to the Committee of Twenty on Reform of the International Monetary System, between 1969 and 1973. He founded a treasury consultancy and software company in 1974, which he continued to run until 2017. In 2008 he returned to scientific research. In November 2015, he published a paper "A new model of human dispersal" on bioRxiv.org, the online preprint archive for biology run by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Between December 2015 and November 2019, he wrote six climate science papers, which were published in a book "The Surface Temperature of the Earth". In December 2021, he published "Urbain Le Verrier on the Movement of Mercury - annotated translations". This was followed a series of reviews of theoretical physics: (April 2023). "Quantum Electrodynamics - annotated sources. Volumes I and II"; (June 2023). "Special Relativity"; (November 2023). "General Relativity"; (March 2024). "Gravity"; (May 2024). "Electricity & Magnetism"; (July 2024). "Quantum Entanglement"; (September 2024). "The Standard Model"; culminating in his conclusions in (October 2024). "New Physics".