I don't know about that but I am back in the top 20 in sales of my book and making progress slowly. I have followed my own path.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/bestsellers/digital-text/159789011/ref=pd_zg_hrsr_kstore_1_6_last Frank Z -----Original Message----- From: Roarty, Francis X <[email protected]> To: vortex-l <[email protected]> Sent: Fri, Apr 25, 2014 8:44 am Subject: RE: [Vo]:They're finally catching up! Mark, I totally agree and believe the virtual particles winking into and out of existence are the constituents of this river flowing 90 degrees to our physical dimensions between the future and the past. While the water molecules of a physical river persist in our physical dimension this flow of virtual particles does not, making even the semantics of pressure and time depend on perspective. Water may be an emergent property but as such it emerges from quantum behavior of still physical atoms and molecules.. space time is the emergent property of a sea of VIRTUAL particles that do not follow classical behavior. IMHO they continue to exert pressure upon each other in an infinite reservoir of time separated by a bladder we call the “Present” that contains our physical dimensions. The virtual particles only exist for us as the resivoir seeps thru the bladder. We normally get away with ignoring the quantum gravity and assume an isotropy because these effects are normally averaged out below the Planck scale and natural formation of geometry that would unbalance these effects is opposed by nature – stiction and Casimir effect being 2 macro world examples, this is why the geometry of these powders and skeletal cats is so difficult to achieve and maintain in that it reaches down below the planck scale to segregate these forces into physical scale regions capable of breaking the isotropy and interacting selectively with physical matter. Fran From: MarkI-Zeropoint [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Thursday, April 24, 2014 6:51 PM To: [email protected] Subject: EXTERNAL: [Vo]:They're finally catching up! Some of the ol' time Vorts will remember how I've been ranting for years on how the vacuum is a near fricionless fluid under extreme pressure... well, the theorists are finally coming around... they got the nearly frictionless part in, now all that's left is to add some 'pressure', and voila! -Mark Iverson Liquid spacetime: A very slippery superfluid, that's what spacetime could be like http://phys.org/news/2014-04-liquid-spacetime-slippery-superfluid.html "If spacetime is a kind of fluid, then we must also take into account its viscosity and other dissipative effects, which had never been considered in detail". Liberati and Maccione catalogued these effects and showed that viscosity tends to rapidly dissipate photons and other particles along their path, "And yet we can see photons travelling from astrophysical objects located millions of light years away!" he continues. "If spacetime is a fluid, then according to our calculations it must necessarily be a superfluid. This means that its viscosity value is extremely low, close to zero". http://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.112.151301

