That's easy!
;-)
Reduce the turbulence in the stream, which for the Dirac Sea, means
using an intense electric or magnetic field to polarize the vacuum...
-mark iverson
On Mon, Apr 28, 2014 at 12:53 PM, Jones Beene wrote:
Taking all of this together, there seems to exist a prima facie case
for this premise:
1) Dark matter is inherent in the quantum vacuum, meaning it is an
illusion in 3-space except for gravitational effects
2) The quantum vacuum = Dirac sea = dark matter
3) CMB is not a relic of a Big Bang but is residual radiation from
the Dirac sea
Now comes the interesting part. Can this information, if valid, be put
to use in alternative energy?
One seemingly obvious way to proceed is to consider CMB as a “leak” of
some kind. If it is a leak, then we want to increase the flow rate.
There are many ways to increase the flow rate of various streams, some
of which are applicable to microwave photons … so let the games begin…
From: ChemE Stewart
http://m.phys.org/news/2011-08-dark-illusion-quantum-vacuum.html
<http://m.phys.org/news/2011-08-dark-illusion-quantum-vacuum.html>
From: David Roberson
A thought just came to me while considering alternate explanations for
the CMB. Dark matter is assumed to be distributed throughout the
universe and is supposed to clump together around galaxy centers and
other large massive objects. I have long wondered how this congregation
of material could occur in matter that has no way to release the
gravitational energy by radiation as with normal matter. Perhaps the
CMB is generated gradually by the condensation of the dark matter.
Or … perhaps dark matter is another aspect of the Dirac Sea ?
http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0705/0705.2908.pdf
<http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0705/0705.2908.pdf>