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10 September 2015 Discovery of dynamical space: experiments and theory
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Abstract
Recently the existence of space as a complex dynamical system was discovered, based upon various experiments going back to 1887. The early experiments by Michelson and Morley 1887, and Miller 1925/26, used light speed anisotropy detected with interferometers. Only in 2002 was the calibration theory first derived. More recently there have been other experimental techniques, including Doppler shift effects detected by NASA using spacecraft Earth flybys. The most recent technique uses current fluctuations through the nanotechnology reverse-biased Zener diode barrier potential, by using two detectors and measuring the time delay in correlations to determine speed and direction of the space flow. Physics has never had a knowledge of this dynamical space, and the theory is now well developed, and is now known to explain the origin of gravity, quantum fluctuations, bore hole g anomalies, galactic rotations, galactic lensing of light, universe dynamics, laboratory G measurements, and more. This dynamical space supports a coordinate system, and it was this that was originally thought to be space itself.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Reginald T. Cahill "Discovery of dynamical space: experiments and theory", Proc. SPIE 9570, The Nature of Light: What are Photons? VI, 957018 (10 September 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2188802
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KEYWORDS
Quantum physics

Sensors

Anisotropy

Interferometers

Diodes

Electroluminescent displays

Physics

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