I think SR also encompasses this if you consider the “temperature” of an experiment near 0 K inside a dilated inertial frame like the Paradox twin approaching C. From our comparatively stationary perspective on earth the “temperature” of the experiment in the twins near luminal spaceship would appear modified beyond normal limits by time dilation. This is opposite of Casimir force where virtual particle density is suppressed instead of compressed but in both cases it is the orientation of this “layer of ice” analogy to another layer that we perceive as dilation that supports Calvert’s theory of 5D universe through which our 3D plane is suspended. As a neo LET proponent I appreciate that his analogy of a layer of ice floating “IN” a deep sea [not on top of the sea]. Fran
From: Jones Beene [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Wednesday, December 21, 2011 10:08 AM To: [email protected] Subject: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:Temperture below absolute temperature If the Calvet paper below is accurate, among other 'miracles' energy can be cohered from ambient conditions by the lower temperature of a QM "heat sink"... Ref: http://www.journaloftheoretics.com/Articles/3-1/calvet-final.htm The authors provides evidence that Casimir force can be considered as a 1-dimensional force vector that is scattered in a 5-dimensional space. To understand that - one needs to think about the main facts as presented in the abstract: Abstract: Conventional forces like gravitation and electromagnetism vary with the square of the distance. This is because the corresponding force is scattered into 3 dimensions due to the distribution of virtual gravitons or photons of the corresponding field in a 3D-space. In an analogous way, the Casimir force, that varies with the 4th power of the distance, ought to arise from bosons distributed in a hyperspace with 5 real physical dimensions. This leads to the prediction of a whole new world of “quantum temperatures” below zero Kelvin, and to a model that surprisingly agrees with cosmology and recent findings of the zero-point-field (ZPF). “Virtual” field particles (e.g. bosons of the ZPF) are probably nothing else than hyperspace particles that cross our 3-D universe from time to time, thus seeming “virtual” to us. This paper details how our universe can be considered as a 3-D space “floating” on an immense 5-D space - the hyperspace - in analogy to a sheet of ice floating in a deep sea.

