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Horizons in World Physics. Volume 312, PDF eBook

Horizons in World Physics. Volume 312 PDF

Edited by Albert Reimer

Part of the Horizons in World Physics series

PDF

Please note: eBooks can only be purchased with a UK issued credit card and all our eBooks (ePub and PDF) are DRM protected.

Description

This book is a compilation of fourteen chapters on the most recent discoveries in World Physics.

In Chapter One, the author's new interdisciplinary approach, based on nonlocal transport equations with memory obtained in nonequilibrium statistical mechanics, describes structural evolution on the mesoscale using principles developed in adaptive systems control theory.

The distinctions and similarities in the evolution of four types of solitary waves propagating in an elastic nonlinear material are studied and commented on in Chapter Two.

The atomic nuclei clusters (ANC) - genomes of viruses and bacteria, molecular clusters, domains, coils in the biocenosis of liquid manure were studied in Chapter Three.

In Chapter Four, the traditional problem of longitudinal waves in collisionless plasma is solved.

Chapter Five is a report of the procedure and results of estimating the temperatures of extrasolar planets discovered by NASA's Kepler-Mission to determine which may be potentially habitable.

Chapter Six explores how we might utilize extrasolar planet density data to help develop criterion for distinguishing between the different types of extrasolar planets, such as Earths, Mini-Neptunes, and Neptunes.

In Chapter Seven the authors observed the tracks of Earth's axions in the direction of the Sun and M1, which led to the conclusion that the planet had collided with a massive cloud of preons.

In Chapter Eight, the International System of Physical Quantities (ISQ) was adapted to the new system (BPSQ) based on the characteristics of the proton's baryon form.

The next chapter displays photographs of the Earth's axions tracks that are desorbed in the direction of magnetic storms on the Sun at the beginning of August 2023.

A model of the desorption process is presented, and observation results are explained.

In Chapter Ten, photographs of the tracks of the Moon's axions are exhibited against the background of the tracks of the Earth's axions during the period of intense magnetic storms on the Sun (December 2023) as a result of falling into the preon cloud.

In the following chapter, photographs of the Earth's axion tracks are presented again, this time with the appearance of a new cloud of preons in the constellation Virgo.

In Chapter Twelve the author discusses the classical theory of molecular optical activity.

In Chapter Thirteen, the authors investigate the IVPs for n-dimensional Schrodinger and wave equations.

The final chapter provides a brief review of the consequences of the hypothesis regarding the existence of a background of superstrong interacting gravitons.

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