tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7307840825023135484.post3558994296795143111..comments2023-04-16T03:44:23.949+12:00Comments on Arcadian Pseudofunctor: M Theory Lesson 347Keahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05652514294703722285noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7307840825023135484.post-48432659894853564062010-09-06T06:40:51.593+12:002010-09-06T06:40:51.593+12:00I have thought of this a few days now, and must as...I have thought of this a few days now, and must ask further. It may be a silly question, but I need more flesh on the bones. This is extremely interesting for me as a biologist.<br /><br />When space expands as for ions, or say the Higgs field that gets energy, then this Fermi surface will 'jump' and get exited as a spike. Then it is the hole that do spikes? It can also be seen as impulses? In this way the Higgs field would oscillate?<br /><br />When kaons oscillate they form dimuons, that is extended hadrons as a BE-condensate. Can this hyper-determinant also be extended to hadronic scale and even ions? Then maybe the massivation would be an open-up of closed strings, induced by energetic oscillations of the field? /Ulla.<br /><br />PS. I must post as anonymous, because I don't succeed in posting on google-account.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7307840825023135484.post-1003165390303443782010-09-04T09:19:37.835+12:002010-09-04T09:19:37.835+12:00Hi Ulla. In a vague sense, yes I guess so!Hi Ulla. In a vague sense, yes I guess so!Keahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05652514294703722285noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7307840825023135484.post-44918373298158569832010-09-04T08:27:44.113+12:002010-09-04T08:27:44.113+12:00Can this hexagon be thinked of as a Fermi surface?...Can this hexagon be thinked of as a Fermi surface?Ullahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/16634036177244152897noreply@blogger.com