Title
Progress On The Gem (Gravity-Electro-Magnetism) Theory Of Field Unification And Its Application To Human Flight
Abstract
Progress on the GEM (Gravity-Electro-Magnetism) theory is presented and its application to human flight. The GEM theory is an alloy of Kaluza-Klein and Sahkarov approaches to unification postulates that that the separate appearances of gravity and EM as long range forces from the Planck scale is correlated with the separate appearances of the proton and electron from a particle- antiparticle pair. Both separations are postulated as stemming from the appearance of a new compactified Kaluza-Klein fifth dimension. The physical length associated with the new fifth dimension is found to be a classical particle radius. The requirement that this GEM scheme be in accord with the Standard Model requires that the fifth dimension be an image of a spacetime interval with a timelike part giving birth to the electron and the spacelike portion having three subdimensions corresponding to the quarks making up the proton. The requirement of cosmic charge neutrality and equal classical radius leads to the requirement of e=qx+qy+qz and e2 = qx2+qy2+q z2 where qx, qy, and qz are the charges of the quarks and is satisfied by the choice 2e/3 =q x, qy, -e/3=qz and this is found to be preserved in a SO(3) symmetry group. In Human flight applications, the Vacuum Bernoulli Equation is found to result from the E×B drift model of gravity in the GEM and to suggest that powerful rotating EM fields may be used to modify gravity.
Publication Date
12-1-2006
Publication Title
Collection of Technical Papers - AIAA/ASME/SAE/ASEE 42nd Joint Propulsion Conference
Volume
11
Number of Pages
8649-8661
Document Type
Article; Proceedings Paper
Personal Identifier
scopus
Copyright Status
Unknown
Socpus ID
34249330918 (Scopus)
Source API URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/34249330918
STARS Citation
Brandenburg, J. E., "Progress On The Gem (Gravity-Electro-Magnetism) Theory Of Field Unification And Its Application To Human Flight" (2006). Scopus Export 2000s. 7722.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/scopus2000/7722