Branch Mathematics and Statistics Faculty and Staff Publications
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2020
Abstract
In Neutrosophic Logic, a basic assertion is that there are variations of about everything that we can measure; the variations surround three parameters called T,I,F (truth, indeterminacy, falsehood) which can take a range of values. Similarly, in this paper we consider NL applications in physics constants. Those constants actually all have a window of plus and minus values, relative to the average value of the constant. For example, speed of light, c, can vary in a window up to +/- 3000 m/s. Therefore it should be written: 300000 km/s +/- 3 km/s. We also discuss some implications of this new perspective of physics constants, including in gravitation physics etc.
Publisher
American Scientific Publishing Group
Publication Title
International Journal of Neutrosophic Science
Volume
1
Issue
1
First Page
14
Last Page
18
DOI
10.5281/zenodo.3633436
Language (ISO)
English
Keywords
Neutrosophic Logic, Physical Neutrosophy, gravitation, physics constants, Michelson-Morley experiment
Recommended Citation
Christianto, Victor; Robert Neil Boyd; and Florentin Smarandache.
"There is No Constant in Physics: a Neutrosophic Explanation."
International Journal of Neutrosophic Science
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Included in
Instrumentation Commons, Logic and Foundations Commons, Other Astrophysics and Astronomy Commons, Other Mathematics Commons, Physical Processes Commons