0 ratings 0% found this document useful (0 votes) 285 views 7 pages Bernhard Haisch, Alfonso Rueda and H.E. Puthoff - Beyond E MC 2: A First Glimpse of A Postmodern Physics, in Which Mass, Inertia and Gravity Arise From Underlying Electromagnetic Processes
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SCIENCES
PUBLISHED BY THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES «NOVEMBER/DECEMBER 1994+ $3.50
STRUGGLE FOR THE SOUL OF SCIENCE
Do Attacks from the Academic Left Pose the Threat of Cultural War?
by MicHiaki. Ruse
Bryonn F=mce2
A First Glimpse of a Universe Without Mass
by BERNHARD HAISCH, ALFONSO RUEDA AND H. E, PUTHOFFSCIENCES
Novemern Oecewaen 1904
BEYOND E= mc?
A first glimpse of @ postmodern physics, in which mass, inertia and gravity
arise from underlying electromagnetic processes
BY BERNHARD HAISCH, ALFONSO RUCDA ANDO H. E. PUTHOFF
[HE MOST FAMOUS OF ALL EQUATIONS MUST |
surely be E=me?, In popular culture that
relation between energy and mass is vir~
tually synonymous with relativity, and
Einstein, its originator, has become a symbol of modern
physics, The usual interpretation of the equation i that one
kind of fundamental physical thing, mass (i in the equa-
tion), can be converted into a quite different kind of fun
damental physical ching, energy (E in the equation), and
vvice versa; the two quantities are inextricably intertwined,
related by the factor ©, the square of che velocity of light
The encrgy of the aun, for instance, comes from nuclear
fission, in which the nuclei of hydrogen atoms fuse to-
gether to become the nuclei of helium atom. In the pre~
‘ailing view mass is lost in the fusion reaction, and as onc
popular astronomy textbook puts it, “The small fraction of
mass that disappears in the process is converted into ener
gy according to the formula i
Recent work by us and others now appears to offer a
sadically different insight into the relation E=me?, as well
4s into the very idea of mas itself. To put it simply, the con
cept of mass may be neither fandamental nor necessary in
physics. In the view we will present, Einstein’ formula is
even more significant than physicists have realized. [is ac~
tually a statement about how much energy is required to
give the appearance of a certain amount of mass, rather
than about the conversion of one fundamental thing, en
ergy, inwy another fundamental ching, mas
Indeed, if that view is correet, there is no such thing 2s
rmass—only electric charge and energy, which together cre~
ate the illasion of mas. The physical universe is made up of
rmasless electric charges immersed in a vast, energetic, all-
pervasive electromagnetic field. Its the interaction of those
charges and the electromagnetic field chat creates the ap-
pearance of mass. In other words, the magizine you now
hold in your hands is mawles; properly unnlerstood, itis
physically nothing more than a collection of electric charges
‘embedded in a universal energetic electromagnetic field and
acted on by the field in such a Way a8 f0 make you think che
magazine has the property of mas. Its apparent weight and
solidity arise from the interactions of charges and field.
26 THE SCIENCES + November/Devember 1994Besides recasting the prevailing view of mass, this idea
would address one of the most profound problems of
physics, the riddle of how gravity can be unified with the
other three fundamental forces of nature. The electromag-
neti force and the weak force, which is responsible for m-
clear decay, have been showa to be two manifestations of a
single force, appropriately called the electroweak
“There are tantalizing hints thatthe strong force, which binds
nuclei together, will someday be unified with the elec-
troweak force. But until now gravity has resisted all attempts
at unification. Ifthe new view is correct, however, gravity
would not need to be separately unified, just as mass would
arise from the electromagnetic force, so would gravity.
st Ig MASS? TWO KEY PROPERTIES DE
\ X ] 1¢ the concept of the mass of a given
amount of matter, namely, its inertia and
the gravitation to which the matter gives ri
area
lari)
Lita Albuquerque, It Takes One Thousand Masters Praying to Melt One Heart of Stone, 1988-89
defined by Galileo as the property of matter that keeps an
object in uniform motion once given an impetus, until the
objects acted upon by some further impetus. Galileo's idea
‘was generalized and quantified by Newton in his Principia,
‘The tendency of an object to remain in uniform motion,
and the tendency of the motion to change when impetus
is applied, Newton expressed in one compact equation
The equation states that the acceleration a, or change of
velocity, is proportional to the force F applied, where the
constant of proportionality isthe inertial mass ms of the ob-
ject in question: thus, F= ma.
In other words, inertial
offers to being accelerated when itis subjected to a force
In Newton's equation of motion, when the application of
a force ceater, the acceleration goes to zero, and the ob-
{ject remains in uniform motion. Objects are assumed t0
resist acceleration, because that resistance is an innate
assis the resistance an object
Inertia was | property of matter.