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Originally Posted by JAK Can you briefly summarize the major paradigms with which your ideas are consistent as well as which ones are in conflict? |
THE CASIMIR EFFECT
This is not a main-line issue but I may as well deal with it and get it out of the way. The Casimir Effect says that: when we have two plane faced metal plates very close together in a vacuum, then the plates will experience an attraction which is inversely proportional to the fourth power of the separation.
Current explanations are very wooly and can be boiled down to "since there are more particles in the universe outside of the space than inside of it then the plates will be forced together". This makes no sense as there is a vacuum on both sides of both plates. It does not even start to explain the measured effect being related to the fourth power of the separation.
My explanation uses stretching of the gravitons in the space between the plates. The aether which is creating the massive particles of the metal plate is very dense due to the mass present whereas the aether which forms the gap between the plates has no massive particles and hence is less dense. The aether has, therefore, to undertake a considerable change in density at the face and this results in extreme stretching of the gravitons which attempts to pull the plates together.
A diagram is located in the main article.