Shrinking the time axis is the same thing as augmenting the spacial axes if we 
are defining distance as Velocity multiplied by time.  Shrinking the time axis 
means that more local time is traversed, requiring more distance.  This is the 
reverse of the Relativistic Twins: In this instance, the cavity "Twin" 
corresponds to the one that stays on Earth and vice versa!

Date: Thu, 27 Jan 2011 17:01:56 -0500
From: [email protected]
Subject: RE: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Rel Cav's: Shrink time axis inside Relativistic 
Cavities to get  correct result!
To: [email protected]



Scott,                I like your model for the temporal aspect but I was 
choosing my words carefully to make my points as  intelligible as possible to 
the most common denominator. I was also trying to make the point that there can 
be a larger volume of space  inside the cavity then the exterior spatial 
dimensions would predict. IMHO Deuterium ice, condensed hydrogen and the myriad 
 other names we apply are all unchanged locally but take on these strange 
appearances when they occupy this extended space inside a Casimir cavity or the 
interstitial space inside a lattice.  I believe that when  
vacuum fluctuations  “appear” to get smaller between Casimir plates it is NOT a 
 simple displacement of the longer flux being replaced by shorter flux that can 
fit between the plates as described in the present popular version of this 
theory. In the relativistic interpretation  it is still the same longer flux  
which only appear shorter in a form of Lorentzian contraction. I believe that 
this type of contraction reflects direct changes to the time axis where space 
time itself is reshaped inside the cavity. Unlike the normal Lorentzian 
contraction of a single dimension where you have spatial velocity in a 
Pythagorean relationship to the “normal” intersecting rate of the ether, this 
version of contraction instead directly changes the intersection rate of this 
nonphysical axis by manipulating energy density. Because the axis of 
displacement/contraction is now 90 degrees to all 3 spatial axis this type of 
contraction should appear  spatially symmetrical and appear
 to get smaller from ANY spatial axis instead of the common Lorentzian 
contraction. The cost of this type of contraction is borne by nature in 
segregating energy density between the outside and inside of a plate cavity 
system in a manner that skips the need for near luminal velocity and instead 
changes time (intersecting rate) directly proportional to local geometry in 
different zones inside and outside the cavity.RegardsFran Wm. Scott Smith said 
on Thursday
, January 27, 2011 1:13 PM
I really think a better way to think about Relativistic Cavities is to think of 
the time-axis shrinking, relative to the also reduced size of they particle 
within the cavity.  Shrinking the time axis, has the effect of accelerating the 
velocity of travel along that axis, ie the passage of time.  This approach 
explains precisely how the H2 molecule "spends so much time there relative to 
us and spends so little time there from an external perspective.                
                     

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