LaViolette prediction of Pioneer anomaly challenges energy conservation law
Date: Monday, January 22, 2007 @ 21:18:38 UTC
Topic: Science


Sepp Hasslberger writes: In 1978, while still a doctoral student at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon, Paul LaViolette made a prediction, which like Einstein's prediction of the bending of starlight may one day be destined to shake the world. At that time, he was developing a unified field theory called subquantum kinetics. Unlike string theory, which has never made any testable predictions, LaViolette's subquantum kinetics theory makes several, ten of which have thus far been confirmed. One in particular challenges the most fundamental of physical laws, the law of energy conservation.

Subquantum kinetics predicts that a photon's energy should not remain constant but rather should change with time, that photons traveling through interstellar space or trapped within stars or planets should continually increase in energy, although at a very slow rate. For example, his theory predicts that a photon traveling through our solar system should increase its energy at a rate of somewhat greater than one part in 10^18 per second.
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Read the whole article:
http://blog.hasslberger.com/2007/01/laviolette_prediction_of_pione.html

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Kind regards

Sepp








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