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RS team's comment:
Today, scientists consider four fundamental forces or interactions that help explain everything that happens in the Universe (actually, our observable universe): gravity, electromagnetism, the weak force (which governs nuclear reactions and beta radioactivity), and the strong force (responsible for the cohesion of nucleons in the atomic nucleus and quarks in nucleons, and for alpha radioactivity).
All scientists agree that gravitation is the weakest of the fundamental forces—billions upon billions upon billions of times weaker than the strong force!
Yet Rael Maitreya stated: “The greatest force in the Universe is Love; scientists call it gravity, attraction…”
A paper by Michel Devaux (Raelian guide), “Heuristic Approach to Gravitation as the Only Fundamental Force,” published in the peer-reviewed scientific journal Applied Physics Research (APR), explains that gravitation is indeed the greatest force, confirming Rael Maitreya’s revelation. The abstract of the paper is reproduced below.
This approach is unique, completely new, and groundbreaking for the scientific world.
Poher's theory of universons (gravitational quanta) makes it possible to reconcile general relativity and quantum physics. The universon, responsible for gravitation, could be the only elementary particle, making up electrons and quarks.
Based on this new quantum gravitation theory and extrapolating beyond, we propose that:
Considering that universons interact only with subatomic particles (and not directly at the macroscopic/ supra-atomic level), the gravitational interaction at the subatomic level could be much stronger than at the macroscopic level; it could be revised upwards by a huge factor: 1030 for nucleons and between 1032 and 1048 for quarks.
Furthermore, within the nucleus, the repulsive force between protons could be weaker if we consider the charges of the d quark (-1⁄3) and u quark (+2⁄3) and not their overall charge +1.
Thus, the gravitational interaction revised upwards at the subatomic level could explain the cohesion of nucleons within the atomic nucleus and the cohesion of quarks, without relying on the strong interaction, making gravitation a candidate as the only fundamental interaction.
This heuristic approach still needs complementary studies and experimental validation.