Primordial and other constants of physics

Dear Kerry,

the gravitational constant has to do with the aether density, because the latter is connected with gravitation. According to the paper under development, it is a special counter-effect to electromagnetism.
The relativists have shown that Einstein’s cosmological constant obeys the relation
Λ = 8 π ρvac G / c4 = κ ρvac .
kappa is related to the gravitational constant G, and rho_vac is the energy density of the vacuum. However, this is very, very low compared to an aether density. This is similar to the ECE equation



where G connects the matter density with its field. Accordign to Eq. (8.285) of the text book,

G is the factor between vacuum density and mechanical “vacuum charge” q_F. The primordial voltage connects geometry and electromagnetism directly. I would rather compare G with the electromagnetic constants epsilon_0, mu_0. There is also a primordial gravitational constant Q(0), see Eq. (7.21) of the text book.

Horst


Am 13.12.2021 um 16:29 schrieb kerry pendergast:

Dear Horst,

Would you agree that the gravitational constant is arbitrary and determined by the mean density of matter in the universe.

Then the primordial voltage defined by torsion in ECE theory, comes from the mean density of matter in the universe.

Kerry



On Monday, 13 December 2021, kerry pendergast <pendergastkerry@gmail.com> wrote:
> Fred Hoyle is famous as a proponent of the steih ady state theory.
>
> In a radio broadcast in March 1949, Hoyle coined the term Big Bang theory, which caught on around the world in the 70s.
>
> In 1979, I got as far as an interview to join his team in Cardiff University.
>
> However, by then their interest was not on the big bang, but on detecting and identifying interstellar molecules in cosmic dust in space. This is why they needed a chemist.
>
> Kerry

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