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Natural Science Forum / Biology / Biology / May 2008



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#6 duplication of the photon and neutrino; biophysics trilogy book     series; "Photon in physics can duplicate similar to cells in biology     replicating"

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plutonium.archimedes@gmail.com - 23 May 2008 19:41 GMT
Alright, the Superposition principle in physics should help out for
the photon in that we can
disassemble a given photon into 2 new photons or combine photons to
making a new photon
so in a sense photons can duplicate or replicate. But photons
have no rest mass and so are in perpetual motion unless absorbed.

Neutrinos have a tiny rest mass and can thus come to rest. Now when we
have a energetic
neutrino of say 10^14 eV that is enough energy to construct a living
organism such as a
bacteria from scratch.

Does the neutrino obey the Superposition principle and can a neutrino
disassemble into
2 new neutrinos or can two neutrinos combine to form a new neutrino?
I rather doubt it.

What would help these researches out tremendously is to have an
experiment of a sterile
jar in which energetic photons or neutrinos are shot into the jar and
whether a bacteria emerges
that was free of bacteria before since it was initially sterile. Sort
of like the Miller experiments
in Chicago where he passed electricity as a lightning strike and found
amino acids. Only here
we pass energetic photons or neutrinos and expect to see a whole
lifeform appear.

Archimedes Plutonium
www.iw.net/~a_plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies
plutonium.archimedes@gmail.com - 23 May 2008 20:16 GMT
plutonium.archime...@gmail.com wrote:
> Alright, the Superposition principle in physics should help out for
> the photon in that we can
[quoted text clipped - 24 lines]
> we pass energetic photons or neutrinos and expect to see a whole
> lifeform appear.

Now why is this so very important that physics has duplication or
replication that
biology has duplication or replication. The answer should be obvious.
If physics has
no mechanism of duplication or replication, then biology is not a
subset of physics
for biology would then have something unique to biology and not
manifest in physics.

Now, let me ask you a question. Can you think of anything in physics
that has something
remotely similar to the duplication and replication that exists in
biology? The only thing
I can think of is the characteristics and traits of the photon and
neutrino as given by the
Superposition principle. Other than the photon and neutrino and
Superposition Principle, I
am at a lack of saying any thing else in physics that comes remotely
to duplication and
replication.

So the importance of this duplication and replication feature of
biology, is that if physics is
the overarching and dominant science where all other sciences are
subsets. Well, physics
better have a feature of duplication and replication.

Archimedes Plutonium
www.iw.net/~a_plutonium
whole entire Universe is just one big atom
where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies
Autymn D. C. - 26 May 2008 03:10 GMT
On May 23, 12:16 pm, plutonium.archime...@gmail.com wrote:
> Now, let me ask you a question. Can you think of anything in physics
> that has something
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
> to duplication and
> replication.

nuclide decay chains/seriies; free radical catalýsts; crýstal twins/
vugs; sand dunes
Autymn D. C. - 26 May 2008 02:46 GMT
a bacteria -> a bacterium

Neutrinos as all other motes can be superposite, but expect a worse
bond than helium.
 
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