Re: Can Photon have an Internal Structure??




Hi, Yehiel,


> but Ghosh it is difficult to remember the spelling of [Zigothau]
> it sound like French is it so ??


The bestest froggiest cheese-eating-surrender-monkiest French name
ever! By the way, it's Zigoteau, and I did tell you what it means, in a
post a long time ago, and far, far away.


> have you ever done pioneering science ??


I like to think so.

I'm not (much) into fundamental theories about the universe, or about
what happens when you concentrate all the energy in my body into a
small number of fundamental particles. I happen to be made of condensed
matter, and am quite interested in that. I guess you could call it
biophysics. I'm interested in self-assembly, of the sort that
biological systems use to assemble functional molecular systems by
their bootstraps. I'm interested in the real world, and making things
that actually work. I believe that the world is not just a figment of
my imagination, and am rather bothered by some aspects of modern
quantum theory, so I'd like to sort those out. Since self-assembly
involves molecular interactions and statistical mechanics of molecular
systems, I'd quite like to understand those. In spite of a lot of
claims to the contrary, I don't think either is properly understood.


> i think i have and it started with wild (intuitive)guesses!!
> some of them succeeded some of them failed.


When you say "succeeded", what do you mean by that? I have never seen
you talk about experimental evidence. Is there any for e.g. your
circlons? With Galileo, I believe that the book of Nature is written in
the language of mathematics. I've never seen you give any mathematics.
Do you have any quantum field theory for your circlons? How do you
reconcile circular or helical motion with Noether's theorem?

You mention a book. Is any of it available on line? In Hebrew or
English? In view of your imaginative spelling in English, I hope it's
been given a thorough editing by someone else.


> one day i am going to open a faculty about how to use intuition in
> scince...
> so ??? what are the conclusions out of it ??


I think all great scientists use intuition. However intuition needs to
be subjected to rigorous testing before it becomes science.

Cheers,

Zigotea.

.



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