Wednesday, April 9, 2014

OK, then are there missing nulls in the universe?

Nulls are needed to stabilize standing wave, it is the standing phase alignment across galaxies that we see and are trying to understand.  At these very low quantization ratios, it does not take much null to stabilize, or separate the positive and negative phase.  But there seems to be a shortage of them nonetheless. Some parts of the universe already have quasars, yet the universe as a whole still seems sparse to me.

Steve Hawkings is right that black holes would still leak waves of the smallest order, near zero, very long wave, low quantization ratios.  But is there a limit to how low these quantization ratios can get? Black holes work because of the containment phase, and the containment comes from a trade, the black holes lose kinetic energy and it forms the containment field. It seems to me that stabilization must be reached, except that the quantum jump at that low order is large.

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