Inertia IS Gravity

Masses, Forces, Motions, and a Number a Little Bit Bigger Than 137

by Guy Cavet Myhre


Formats

Softcover
$13.95
Softcover
$13.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 12/7/2004

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 116
ISBN : 9781420807127

About the Book

Physicists and laypersons alike, rejoice! The crumbling, 75-year-old flawed foundation of quantum-physics methodology is facing its imminent coup de grâce, to be replaced by a new, wholly-rational foundation. Myhre’s essay fires the first shot, which renders current physics textbooks instantly obsolete—Really! He begins with many insightful discoveries, the oldest, of which, dates from a half century ago, when he was a USAF pilot. It is about the great importance of inertia in our lives, of how it determines the size of our atoms and the rate of our aging, and of how Myhre eventually discovered that the number 137 is closely associated with inertia—he speculates that the magnitude of inertial force varies throughout the Universe and that it is 137 times greater in the vicinity of the Solar System than at a location in the Universe where it is at a minimum—pretty heady stuff—yet, his arguments, backed by mathematical equations, are quite convincing.

Later, he made the all-important discovery of the quantum attributes of elementary particles, which, when used as units of measure, make the universal physical constants literally vanish from quantum-based equations. This simplification of a main aspect of quantum physics lead Myhre to discover other, heretofore, unknown aspects of our physical environment—for example: the simple, but elegant, linkage between electromagnetic and gravitational force; the realization of the beginning of a quantum-gravity model; the fine-structure constant’s correct definition; the rôle of updated Planck values in determining the possible existence of an elementary particle of matter that is mediated by the graviton; new, more-rational equations about gravitational phenomena, using the quantum attributes of the hypothetical elementary particle of matter as units of measure; and many more.

When Myhre retired, he decided to expose to the world the great truths about our quantum world that he has discovered over the decades. During that time, he kept most of his discoveries to himself because his family, friends, and associates, not being part of the physical community and, therefore, not in the know, would neither appreciate his discoveries nor recognize their importance. With the publication of this essay, Myhre hopes to prompt academic physicists to finalize the coup de grâce that he has begun by continuing to develop this more-coherent foundation for the methodology of quantum physics, which was impossible to achieve in the late 1920s because of the lack of sufficient knowledge at that time.


About the Author

The author was born and raised in the Midwest during the height of the Great Depression and graduated from Fair­banks High School in Alaska. Fifty years ago, while a USAF pilot, he began pon­dering about aspects of inertial force. Then, over thirty years ago, his interest increased after attending a modern phy­sics course while earning BSEE and MBA degrees at the University of Wash­ington in Seattle. Thereafter, he became more and more interested in inertial force until reading about it and about other enigmas that pertain to our physical envi­ronment became his hobby. He spent countless hours in physics libraries and, over the decades, has purchased a great number of physics books. Now, he possesses an ever-growing library of them. He struggles through the more-professional books, not comprehending much of their arcane and highly-mathematical content, mainly in those thick books by Peebles, Wheeler, et alii. Nevertheless, he does obtain a good feeling for the limited range of information that he does seek.

Of course, as a hobby, this was not his day job. After leaving the USAF as a pilot in Normandy, he married there and helped his wife run her par­ents’ restaurant, the finest on the highway midway between Paris and the resorts bordering upon the English Channel, with the finest international clientele. Years later, because a new super highway bypassed the restaurant and taxes paid by merchants increased, as France became more and more socialistic, he returned to the United States with his family.

Other work was as a camp manager at various remote construction sites in Africa and Alaska. Besides the restaurant in France, he was a French res­taurateur and chef de cuisine in Florida and in Washington state. He was a professor of computer systems technology at Memphis State University in Memphis and a professor of computer science at Western Washington Uni­versity in Bellingham near the Canadian border. Before retiring in San Diego, California, he was a quality analyst there for electronic document-storage and -retrieval systems and a technical writer creating, for those sys­tems, user manuals in English and translating them into French.