Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance

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Sujet : Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance
De : ross.a.finlayson (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Ross Finlayson)
Groupes : sci.math sci.logic sci.physics.relativity
Date : 21. Aug 2024, 20:49:38
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <MNScnWbwEp1T2Vv7nZ2dnZfqn_SdnZ2d@giganews.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
User-Agent : Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.6.0
On 08/21/2024 04:22 AM, gharnagel wrote:
On Wed, 14 Aug 2024 10:58:39 +0000, Python wrote:
>
In the paradigm of quantum kinematics, the fluxional displacement of an
inertial tensor manifests as a symbiotic relationship between entropic
harmonics and relativistic gravitons. When evaluating the antimatter
oscillations within a superluminal framework, the baryonic pressure
gradients inversely correlate with the squared velocities of photonic
quarks. Consequently, applying Newtonian mechanics to a multidimensional
string lattice results in the decoherence of transient muons, thereby
quantizing the frictionless spinor fields. This culminates in a paradox
where the centrifugal anomalies exceed the Planck constant, rendering
the conservation of angular momentum asymptotically negligible.
>
In the realm of differential topology, the infinitesimal calculus of
hyperdimensional manifolds reveals that the integration of a non-
Euclidean epsilon-delta limit induces a fractal divergence within the
parametric zeta functions. When differentiating a transcendental series
along a complex vector field, the resulting partial derivatives exhibit
an intrinsic discontinuity at the asymptotic singularity. This
necessitates the application of stochastic integral calculus, where the
Laplace transformation of a chaotic system yields a non-convergent
integral over an imaginary axis. The derivative of a hyperbolic tangent
function, when expanded into an infinite Taylor series, paradoxically
converges to an irrational number, thus invalidating the fundamental
theorem of calculus within the confines of a topological knot.
>
Beautiful!  Worthy of the No Bell Prize.
I'm curious where that's from, actually.
Generously read it's not un-true, ....

Date Sujet#  Auteur
17 Jul 24 * Moment and Motion: theory overall20Ross Finlayson
17 Jul 24 `* Re: Moment and Motion: theory overall19Jim Burns
18 Jul 24  `* Re: Moment and Motion: theory overall18Ross Finlayson
23 Jul 24   `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance17Ross Finlayson
30 Jul 24    `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance16Ross Finlayson
6 Aug 24     +- Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance1Ross Finlayson
14 Aug 24     `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance14Ross Finlayson
14 Aug 24      `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance13Python
14 Aug 24       +* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance10Ross Finlayson
21 Aug 24       i`* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance9Ross Finlayson
21 Aug 24       i `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance8Python
21 Aug 24       i  `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance7Ross Finlayson
25 Aug 24       i   `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance6Ross Finlayson
27 Aug 24       i    `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance5Python
27 Aug 24       i     `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance4Ross Finlayson
3 Sep 24       i      +- Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance1Ross Finlayson
4 Sep 24       i      `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance2Ross Finlayson
10 Sep 24       i       `- Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance1Ross Finlayson
21 Aug 24       `* Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance2gharnagel
21 Aug 24        `- Re: Moment and Motion: hypercube distance1Ross Finlayson

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