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Re: The Universal Vortical Singularity
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JamesANicholson
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Re: The Universal Vortical Singularity - 03-14-2008, 04:46 AM

Hello, to everyone who has been following this thread.
Mind if I join in the fray?

I spent a little time a few years back considering the formation of vortexes in how they would fit into my own ToE.

Specifically I was trying to analyze the natural cycle of water going from ice or liquid to vapor, rising up high into the atmosphere, condensing back to liquid or ice and falling to the earth and flowing to the sea to repeat the cycle all over again.

One of the phenomena I needed Toe (sic) consider was: what was the cause of Tornadoes and Hurricanes? There seemed to be overwhelming evidence that they always occurred where two large masses of air of different temperature or pressure came together and joined each other.

It seemed that only under these conditions did the funnels or vortexes come about and in a real way it seems to be the simple result of these differentials interacting or coming together.

But I wanted to know what was going on from a molecular level. I knew that a small drop of water when vaporized would expand to fill a much bigger volume at the same pressure, so of course the opposite also happens that when vapor condensed back into liquid form, a huge volumetric pressure absence would be formed, a vacuum. So, I am wondering if this kind or processes are not going on for all variation of vortexes?

A differential of states, coupled with a volume altering condensation of one form or another?

Then as to the circular/conical shape, circles and spheres are just the most efficient shapes for containing area and volume and can be solved with basic Min/Max Calculus applications, if I remember correctly. It’s been a few years. How many of you are Mathematicians?


It seems to me that all vortexes are not causal but are the result of external conditions that manifest as vortexes as the most efficient geometry for merging of differing states of pressure and/or temperature regions.
  
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