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Originally Posted by <<>> I'm convinced by your post, I now believe that charge has several dimensions. I have still two questions:
1. Why must mass always be linear, and thus have only one dimension? |
We have a tendency to want to continually reduce our understanding to finer principles, but at some point we reach a limit. As far as physical existence goes, it begins very specifically at the level of primary angular momentum. We can only examine the dimensions of primary angular momentum and the geometry of the Aether in which it resides. After that, there is no "why" or "how" without delving into metaphysics. The quantum subatomic particles are quantum because they are the most basic forms of matter that can be measured.
It is in examining the structure of primary angular momentum (Planck's constant in the case of the electron) that we see mass has a linear structure.
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Originally Posted by <<>> 2. Why must charge only have 2 dimensions, could it have more? why? why not? |
When we examine the structure of primary angular momentum, we see that mass is a linear, circular structure and that it moves perpendicular to its diameter through a quantum Aether unit. As the string of mass moves sideways through the Aether unit, it scans an area. This combination of a string of mass moving through the Aether is what causes strong charge. Hence, the strong charge of the electron is quantified as h * Cd, or Planck's constant times the conductance of the Aether.
It is simply by observing the quantum Aether dynamics that we can determine that mass is linear and charge is distributed.