Thursday, July 18, 2013

The Secrets of the universe

In physics, there are some natural laws, but many scientific
theories. There are also rather interpretations, opinions and
hypotheses on which these theories are based on.

If we leave aside the theories and the various opinions and
interpretations as "man's work", then only the laws of nature
will remain. The empirically confirmed and universally valid
laws of nature do explain the relationships and
interrelationships of physical phenomena. However, there is
a problem: they contain partially natural constants that only
can be determined by measurement. While describing the
processes of nature, one will encounter physical constants,
whose values can be measured, but so far no one knows what
they are to be attributed to.

The secrets of the universe are thus hidden in the constants
of nature. Consequently, many well-known physicists had
the desire to derive the number of fundamental constants
from a single constant.

There are over a hundred fundamental constants, but only
about two dozen of them are elementary, and the rest can be
derived from them. After the discovery of the final formula I
have therefore derived the basic constants of nature,
because it is possible to explain the entire universe with
them. The derived constants of nature have been selected
after careful consideration, and as we shall see later, even
these fundamental constants of nature are based on a single
number, namely the elementary constant.

Einstein also was dissatisfied with the constants of nature,
and he has described it as follows: "... I cannot compellingly
think of any reasonable and consistent theory that
explicitly contains one number which could also have been
chosen as another number by the whim of the Creator,
where the world qualitatively would have been represented
in a different way in its laws. "

For Einstein, the most elementary constants of nature such
as the speed of light, gravitational constant and the Planck
quantum of action were not really fundamental, because
their value still depends on "conventional" units. Only if it
could be succeed to create one quantity from several
constants that is a pure numerical value without unit of
measurement, then a universal constant would exist
according to Einstein's view. However the numerical value of
this universal, absolute constant should be determined by


the logical basis of the physical theory.

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