The interference of waves (longitudinal or transverse) causes deadspot and resonance. The first is a consequence of destructive interference. The second is a consequence of constructive interference. In a perfect universe only waves of the same frequencies and wavelengths can create both near absolute deadspots and resonances. The results of the first are the uniformity and continuity or isotropy and homogeneity of the space-time continuum. The results of the second are the oddness and evenness of matter and energy. However, in an imperfect universe both relative deadspots and relative resonances create the multitude forms of elementary particles and their associated energies. Moreover, the self-interferences of waves create standing waves with their deadspots as nodes and their resonances as antinodes, giving the richness of different longitudinal, transversal, or torsional musical sounds, the high and low pitches and pure tones and the standing wavefunctions of de Broglie’s matter waves for all elementary particles and their associated energies. All these can be studied and described by a quantum theory of radiation, giving the empirical science of atomic and molecular spectra of energy distributions and the experimental success of quantum mechanics.


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