Tuesday, March 20, 2007

What does Kaon particle decay, neutrino spin, gravitomagnetism, dark energy, universal inflation and the shape of space all have to do with each other? Nothing. Unless you combine the empirical observations combined in the following five articles (cited below, with URL Links). For information regarding Kaon particle decay, you may want to look up Kaons in the Wikipedia. URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-particle

In and of themselves, the first three factors seem to have nothing to do with the other three. Yet, we wondered if dark energy, the shape of space and the universal inflation can be indirectly observed in neutrino spin, Kaon paritcle decay and gravitomagnetism.

Can the apparent permanent left-handed spinning neutrino (no matter the viewpoint of the observer), the apparent CP violations of Kaon decay and gravitomagnetism be explained by things unknown to us such as the ultimate shape of the universe, the cause of universal inflation and dark energy. Are the first three resultant from the latter three - or are the latter three one giant unseen phenomenon - a "super phenomenon"?

Is the left-handed spinning neutrino a descriptor of the shape of space? Is space, at this dimension, ultimately left-handed? And what of the apparent CP violations of Kaon decay? Is this a descriptor for the temporal component of space time continuously moving forward, and never "backward"? Are these combined effects caused by the unknown properties of the shape of the space we and the universe inhabit? As we have said in a previous posting, 95% of the material making up the knowable universe is unknown to us.

Are the spin-components of the left-handed neutrino and the temporal-component of Kaon decay contributors to the so-called gravitomagnetic effect and to the dark energy of the universe? Are there unknown regions of the universe ruled by mind-bending rules which we are virtually unaware of in our locality of the universe? In this way, are the rules of physics "localized" throughout the universe - producing apparently bizarre effects in our neighborhood, but are actually the norm, the rule in other localities in the universe? And, has inflation resulted in the isotropy that has produced these apparently bizarre, but commonplace physical phenomena elsewhere? Or is the reverse equally true? Is inflation a result of the isotropy of non-local bizarre physical phenomena appearing here and there throughout the universe?

New Scientist. V192, N 2581, “Where Does It All End?” http://space.newscientist.com/article/mg19225811.300-fold-testament-the-shape-of-the-universe.html.

New Scientist. V192, N2577, “Gravity’s Secret”
http://www.newscientist.com/channel/fundamentals/mg19225771.800-gravitys-secret.html.

New Scientist.V193, N 2587, “Einstein’s Nemesis”
http://www.newscientist.com/channel/fundamentals/mg19325871.400-sending-einstein-into-a-spin.html.

New Scientist. V193, N 2593 “Who Put The Bang in The Big Bang?”
http://space.newscientist.com/article/mg19325931.400-inside-inflation-after-the-big-bang.html.

Scientific American. V296, N 2, “The Cosmic Grip of Dark Energy” .