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Science & Technology
Scientists Have Found a Particle That Could Be Portal Into Fifth Dimension
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<blockquote data-quote="Martian" data-source="post: 227205" data-attributes="member: 6511"><p>Here's a direct link to the academic paper:</p><p></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1140/epjc/s10052-021-08851-0.pdf[/URL]</p><p></p><p>It sounds like it's only theoretical. A lot of things start that way before being experimentally discovered, so who knows.</p><p></p><p>Having read through a lot of old science books, I think a good place to start looking for "dark energy" or "dark matter" is in the mathematical approximations used in a lot of derivations. Even though a lot of the scientists from ages past were absolutely brilliant, they didn't have practical methods for solving a lot of the differential equations they encountered. They would drop terms from equations that seemed to be small enough to ignore, they would truncate infinite series, and they would simplify things to mathematical forms that they already knew how to solve. Nowadays, we have computers able to numerically solve a lot of equations that so far lack analytical solutions, but if the simulations include the same simplifications as what was derived ages ago, they'll result in the same inaccuracies.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Martian, post: 227205, member: 6511"] Here's a direct link to the academic paper: [URL unfurl="true"]https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1140/epjc/s10052-021-08851-0.pdf[/URL] It sounds like it's only theoretical. A lot of things start that way before being experimentally discovered, so who knows. Having read through a lot of old science books, I think a good place to start looking for "dark energy" or "dark matter" is in the mathematical approximations used in a lot of derivations. Even though a lot of the scientists from ages past were absolutely brilliant, they didn't have practical methods for solving a lot of the differential equations they encountered. They would drop terms from equations that seemed to be small enough to ignore, they would truncate infinite series, and they would simplify things to mathematical forms that they already knew how to solve. Nowadays, we have computers able to numerically solve a lot of equations that so far lack analytical solutions, but if the simulations include the same simplifications as what was derived ages ago, they'll result in the same inaccuracies. [/QUOTE]
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Scientists Have Found a Particle That Could Be Portal Into Fifth Dimension
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