Branch Mathematics and Statistics Faculty and Staff Publications
Document Type
Book
Publication Date
2022
Abstract
This book is inspired by a German theoretical physicist, Sabine Hossenfelder’s publication: “Lost in Mathematics”. Her book seems to question highly mathematical and a lot of abstraction in the development of physics and cosmology studies nowadays. There is clear tendency that in recent decades, the physics science has been predominated by such an advanced mathematics, which at times sounding more like acrobatics approach to a reality. Through books by senior mathematical-physicists like Unzicker and Peter Woit, we know that the answer of TOE is not in superstring theories or other variations of such 26 dimensional bosonic string theory, of which none of those theories survived experimental test, but perhaps in low dimensional physics. As Alexander Unzicker suggests, perhaps it is more advisable to consider rotation in 3D space (known as SO3), or a kind of superfluid vortices version of gravitation theory. We can also reconsider proposition by the late Prof F. Winterberg (formerly professor at Univ. Nevada, Reno), that it is most likely that superfluid phonon roton theory in 3D can replace the entire superstring theories. While we don’t explore yet implications of his model to particle physics, we discuss here some published papers at several journals in the past few years.
Publisher
Euonia Publisher, East Java, Indonesia
Language (ISO)
English
Keywords
theoretical physics, real physics
Recommended Citation
Christianto, Victor and Florentin Smarandache. "Lost and Found in Mathematics." (2022). https://digitalrepository.unm.edu/math_fsp/567
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.