Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Compton and Avogadro

Avogadro and Higgs seems to agree on the largest number of things we can count in a sphere. Yet Compton and the wave number seem to agree on the number of pseudo masses counted in a straight lines.  The Null count for bubbles agrees with the frequency. MIT reports a wavelength of 6e6 meters. Is this correct?

This system is simply the optimal counter under the conditions imposed by the bubble of the vacuum. Compton introduces something called c, which relates two unit definitions, and is a scale factor used for division in his system.  So, both Compton and Avogadro agree in this system.

But the bubbles seem to prefer the Avogadro standard. But, on the quantum scale, Compton is likely measuring a small sphere, because of momentum times position make a cubed power.

The speed of light, meters per second, is just some scale factor used in engineering approximations.  The real units of physics are bandwidth and band limits.

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