Roarty, Francis X wrote:

> 
>  I am proposing that Lorentz contraction
> can occur in the opposite direction creating a time dilation where the
> gas diffused in a Casimir cavity appears to accelerate while the orbital
> diameter quite correctly calculates smaller than ground state because it
> is contracting away on the temporal axis.

I didn't quite follow this; English explanations, as always, tend to be
a bit fuzzy.  Could you characterize this reversed Lorentz contraction
mathematically, and show where you believe it comes from?

Lorentz contraction, so called, takes place when we shift our point of
view from one reference frame to another, and mathematically, it falls
out of the Lorentz transform for mapping coordinates in one inertial
frame to another.  What frames are we discussing here, and what
transform, exactly, are you proposing using which will result in
reversed contraction and (apparently) reversed time dilation?


> This only explains catalytic
> action but I suspect a Rigid catalyst can restrict access to the
> temporal axis such that only atoms can translate between hydrino and
> hydrogen states. Therefore monatomic gas diffusing deep into a temporal
> corridor

What, exactly, is a temporal corridor?

Could you characterize it mathematically?  (The English phrase "temporal
corridor" doesn't do a lot for me, I'm afraid.)

Reply via email to