Dean Sinclair
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to mura...@physics.berkeley.edu, oscillatorsubstance-theory
Dear Professor Murayama:
I think you might find interesting this little note,
There is a Super Symmetry Theorists' idea that every particle has a
massive partner. These particles apparently are considered as
independent
units..
What appears to be essentially the same idea arises naturally in
Oscillator/Substance Theory if the units be considered as two parts of
a whole with the massive unit hidden within the less massive.
,This comes from the second oscillator limit that arises when one
inserts the "rest" mass and radius values for a "particle," e.g., an
electron, into one side of the "Lost Key Equation," m x r =h/c=r x m,
and completes the equation by reversing the absolute number values to
find the other oscillator limit.
This, of course, is because the rest mass values turn out to be a set
of minimal mass and maximal radius, whereas the reversed values
constitute a maximal mass and minimal radius limit.
These limits, in a sense, define an "outer particle" and an "inner
particle." Looked at this way, one may say, "Sure, Super Symmetry is
correct. If someone had looked in the right way, it would have been
seen a Century ago!"
Sincerely,
Dean L. Sinclair, BA, MS, PhD (Discoverer/originator of
"Oscillator/Substance Theory" and the "MESSE" acronym [ MESSE stands
for "Motion toward Equilibrium, Sequentially, in the Substance of
Existence."] )