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 A
				COMPLETE RE-DERIVATION of E=MC2 or
				HOW CORRECTED TRANSFORMS in SPECIAL RELATIVITY affect MASS,
				MOMENTUM and ENERGY EQUATIONS
 
 
  Einstein
				hiding behind his paper
 
 
 
 
 by Miles
				Mathis click
				here to go to a gloss of this paper
 
 
 First written October 2004 Introduction In
				this paper I will derive new transformation equations for mass,
				momentum and energy. I will show that Einstein, despite using a
				thought problem that was useful and mostly correct in variable
				assignments, made several crucial errors that compromised his
				final equations. The thought problem I am mainly concerned with
				here is in his short paper of 1905, Does
				the Inertia of a Body Depend upon its Energy Content?
				Fully half of my paper
				is devoted to analyzing, critiquing and expanding this thought
				problem and its math. The rest of the paper is devoted to a
				variant thought problem I devised to clarify Einstein’s
				variable assignments and conceptual assumptions. This thought
				problem yields new equations that answer many of the embedded
				mysteries of relativity and mass transformation.Einstein’s paper Does
				the Inertia of a Body Depend upon its Energy Content?
				has long been a source
				of confusion. It’s brevity and opacity have made its underlying
				concepts quite difficult to unravel. As with the time and length
				transforms of Special Relativity, the mass transforms that this
				paper yielded have never been corrected. They have been confirmed
				to the satisfaction of most experimental scientists and therefore
				the math to derive them has become a moot point. It was long ago
				swallowed up by much more complex math, including hyperbolic
				fields, imaginary numbers, Hilbert spaces, Hamiltonians,
				Lagrangians, and the tensor calculus. Although thousands of
				papers have been written on the mass transforms, no one has so
				far offered a crystal clear explanation of Einstein’s algebraic
				variables and equations. In the past half-century, no famous
				physicists or mathematicians have even attempted to do so. Some
				have glossed the derivation as presented by Einstein, but none
				who accepted his final equations have provided a superior
				groundwork for them.
 Now, a century later, only those who do not accept the final
				equations spend time on the mass transforms. And they do not
				attempt to clarify Einstein’s mistakes. Rather, they present a
				variant math that makes more sense to them. Some of these variant
				maths have a certain validity, but I believe that none will be
				looked at seriously until Einstein’s math is proven to be
				false. That is what my paper does. A falsification of Einstein’s
				algebra will be a falsification of all the higher maths that rest
				upon it.
 
 Einstein’s paper is a compound—and sometimes
				a compensation—of several basic algrebraic errors. Although in
				the body of the paper I will prove these errors exhaustively,
				here I will just gloss them. Firstly, he incorrectly applies his
				time transform gamma
				to the planes of light.
				Secondly, he misapplies the term m0c2
				at the end of the
				derivation, giving it to the body rather than to the planes of
				light. This is difficult to understand, since the final equation
				contains the variable L, which he has explicitly given to the
				light. Despite these two errors Einstein arrives at a transform
				that is very nearly correct. That transform is again gamma.
 Einstein then solves
				down from this energy transform to find a mass transform, which
				is likewise gamma.
				But in this case he is wholly mistaken: his misassignment of
				variables has cost him needed clarity, and gamma
				is not even an
				approximation of the correct mass transform. This mistake has
				rarely been seen, since in experimental situations mass is always
				calculated from energy equations. In working with subatomic
				particles, for instance, the naked mass transform equation is
				never used. Values are arrived at from energy equations. As I
				said, Einstein's energy equation is almost correct. The term for
				gamma
				is
 γ =     
				    1    
				.
 √1 - (v2/c2)]
 I will prove that by
				correcting the math, the energy transform for Einstein's problem
				is actually kappa
 κ
				= 1 + [v'2/(2c2
				+ cv' - v'2)]
				or
 ET
				= m0c2[1
				+ (v’/2c)]
 [1 – (v’2/c2)]
 You can see that the difference is very small in most
				situations*, and might pass for decades without final
				experimental confirmation, especially in a milieu that considered
				Relativity a settled question. Physical
				Review Letters,
				the primary publication of record in the US, doesn't even have a
				category for Special Relativity. A scientist could not present a
				finding if he had one.
 
 *In
				comparing kappa and
				gamma, it is also
				important to note that I prove below that Einstein's thought
				problem is not directly analogous to the more common experimental
				problem of a sub-atomic particle in an accelerator. I show that
				the energy equations must vary from problem to problem, depending
				upon the physical situation.
 
 In
				deriving this new transform I also discovered several other facts
				of great interest. One of these is that E ≠ mc2.
 If we assume that the rest energy is given by the rest mass—as
				in Er
				= mrc2—then
				the moving energy cannot be given by the moving mass, in a
				straight equation. A transform is required here as well, and it
				is not gamma.
				This is a consequence of Einstein's own variable assignments.
				Einstein assumed, with no theoretical or mathematical backup,
				that mc2
				must be the term that
				is applied to the final energy E. It turns out that this is not
				the case.
 Even more
				astonishing is that using my new derivation, where all the
				variables are rigorously assigned, I am able to prove that the
				classical equation is precisely
				equivalent to the
				relativistic equation. In other words,
 K = κmrc2
				- mrc2
				= mv2/2
 Simply by correcting the math of Einstein's own thought problem,
				I arrive at a new energy transform κ that is nearly equivalent
				to γ. This new transform allows me to derive the classical
				equation directly, by a straight substitution. In doing so, I
				prove that the classical equation is not an approximation at low
				speeds, as has always been assumed. It is an exact equation. The
				binomial expansion of the differential in gamma
				is a manufactured
				proof, since gamma
				itself does not exist
				as a correct transform in any part of Special Relativity.
 
 In
				an earlier paper, I derived new transformation equations for
				time, distance and velocity. My central transform there was α =
				alpha
				= 1/[ 1 – (v/c)] = 1
				+ (v'/c), which replaced gamma.
				Interestingly, the term that I call alpha
				is commonly used in
				optics to transform the frequency of light. I recently found
				Richard Feynman using it in a proof of Relativity (Feynman
				Lectures on Gravitation,
				lecture 7). So even the status quo should have been surprised to
				find Einstein using gamma
				to transform light
				frequency as he does. No one, apparently, has ever seen the
				contradiction in this until now.
 Before I get to Einstein's thought problem, I must first gloss
				the findings of my earlier paper, since they are crucial to
				understanding this paper. In that paper I showed that Einstein
				misunderstood his initial coordinate system and variable
				assignments, so that his transforms end up being unassignable. He
				applies gamma
				to his time and
				distance transforms, in this way:
 t = γt'     
				and      x = γx'.
 Unfortunately, these transforms are not correct. In
				his various thought problems—the most famous of which is the
				man on the train—Einstein has three coordinate systems. He has
				the man's system, the train's system, and the system of the
				platform, for example. But he tries to solve from only two
				systems. In his equations, he has only a primed system and an
				unprimed system, but no double-primed system. At the end, when he
				finds t = γt', he has mistaken a transform from the man to the
				platform for a transform from the train to the platform. Einstein
				completely ignores the direct transform from the platform to the
				train. His given velocity v is the velocity of the train relative
				to the platform, he tells us. But he does not say whether this is
				the velocity as measured from the train or from the platform. The
				two measurements must be different, but Einstein never includes
				this difference in his calculations. t = γt' therefore applies
				to a transform from the platform to the man, which is in fact a
				transform of two degrees of relativity. He never provides
				transforms for one degree of relativity.
 t = γt'     
				should read
 t = γt''
 However, I show that gamma
				is incorrect for two
				degrees of relativity as well.
 
 I was the first to
				demonstrate first-degree relativity, as well as the first to
				offer transforms for it.
 t = αt'      and
				     x = x'/α
 I was also the first to offer corrected second-degree transforms,
				although these do not enter into mass transform solutions.
 My first-degree
				transforms are in inverse proportion between x and t, whereas
				Einstein's were in direct proportion. His mistake came about by
				borrowing the light equations of Lorentz, x = ct and x' = ct',
				which I have shown are incorrect.
 Finally, my discovery of first-degree transforms allowed me to
				derive a first-degree transform for velocity, which Einstein
				never derived. His transform for velocity is for two degrees of
				relativity, v to v'', as he admitted, and as has never been
				questioned. Until my paper, there had been no v', nor any idea
				that it was necessary to the solution. I have been answered that
				Relativity is symmetrical around v, but it isn't. It could be
				symmetrical around velocity only if system S was “me measuring
				you,” while S' was “you measuring me.” But since in
				Relativity, S' is “me measuring you,” while S is “you
				measuring you,” the equations
				cannot be symmetrical.
				Without this symmetry, we must find two values for velocity from
				the beginning.
 In
				this current paper, I show that the correct mass transform must
				be derived from one degree of relativity, using v'. Einstein was
				not capable of this solution, since he did not have a v' in his
				choice of variables. 
 
 
 
 
 Part
				OneEinstein's Solutions
 Now
				let us proceed to the mass and energy transforms. The best place
				to start is with Einstein's second paper of 1905, Does
				the Inertia of a Body Depend upon its Energy Content?
				In this paper he has a body at rest
				emit two planes of light in opposite directions. The two planes
				of light have equal energies; therefore the body remains at rest
				after the emission. He then asks how the energy of this body
				before and after the emission would look to an observer moving
				directly away from the body at velocity v. 
 
  
 To
				be precise, he never specifies that the observer is moving away
				from the body (in the positive x direction, with the body at the
				origin) but it is implied by analogy to his previous paper. I
				will say, in passing, that his failure to specify a direction in
				this paper has had far-reaching consequences, since it has been
				assumed (without much argument one way or the other) that the
				direction is not important. That is, all the transforms of
				Special Relativity are now assumed to be non-specific regarding
				direction. This is too bad, since I have shown (and will show
				again, below) that Relativity must be specific regarding
				direction.
 Einstein lets
				the two planes of light emit from the body at angles to the
				x-axis, and therefore to the observer. Let us call B the system
				of the observer and A the system of the body. Using his
				nomenclature,
 E0
				= the initial energy in A. This is
				not kinetic energy (from the point of view of the emitting body)
				since he states that the body is not moving in A. It is unclear
				what E0 is
				at this point. But from the outcome of the equations, E0
				must be what he calls the initial
				rest energy, as in E0
				= m0c2.
				Since the body is at rest in A, E0
				is both the rest energy and the
				total energy.
 E1
				is the energy in A after the
				emission of the two planes of light.
 
 H0
				is the initial energy of the body as
				seen from B. That is, it is the initial rest energy plus the
				kinetic energy.
 H1
				is the final total energy of the
				body from B, being the final rest energy plus the final kinetic
				energy.
 L/2 = the energy
				of each plane of light, as measured from A.
 
 E0
				= E1
				+ L/2 + L/2      
				This is the equation as calculated from A
 H0
				= H1
				+ aL/2
				+ bL/2     
				This is the equation from B, where a
				is the negative angle transform and
				b is
				the positive angle transform
 a
				= γ[1 + (v/c)cosφ]
 b
				= γ[1 - (v/c)cosφ]
 where γ =
				gamma =1/√[1
				- (v2/c2)]
 
 Now,
				Einstein says the initial kinetic energy of the body is
				represented by the equation
 K0
				= H0
				- E0
 And
				the final kinetic energy is represented by
 K1
				= H1
				- E1
 So
				that the change in kinetic energy is
 
 K0
				- K1
				= L{       1
				           
				- 1} = γL - L
 √[1 - (v2/c2)]
 
 That
				is the whole paper. It takes up less than three pages in Annalen
				der Physik. It will take
				me somewhat longer to show all the mistakes in it.
 The cardinal error in this whole derivation is in the final two
				steps. At the end Einstein mixes up the last equation with the
				next to the last equation, treating them as the same thing. But
				one expresses the final kinetic energy and the other expresses
				the change in kinetic energy. They are not the same in this
				problem, since the body has an initial kinetic energy (from the
				point of view of the observer). Einstein assigns the term γL to
				H1 and
				the term L to E1.
				He assumes that H1
				is mc2
				and E1
				is m0c2.
				But look back up the series of steps:
 L ≠ E1
 H1
				≠ γL
 This is because K1
				≠ K0
				- K1.
 
 Once
				you have digested the enormity of that, notice that in the final
				step Einstein has subtracted the final kinetic energy from the
				initial. This is backwards. It is standard practice to subtract
				the initial energy from the final to find a change in energy.
				Corrected, the equation should read, K1
				- K0
				= L(1 - γ)
 An even greater error is made in assigning values to the light
				angle transforms a
				and b.
 Notice that the magnitudes of a
				and b
				are not equal. The observer in B
				would therefore expect Einstein's body to change course, since
				one of the planes of light would have more energy than the other,
				measured from B. Einstein ignores this. The body must not change
				velocity, because then the change in kinetic energy would be due
				to that velocity change and not to a change in mass—which is of
				course what he is trying to prove. By a mathematical trick
				Einstein gets the two planes of light to add to unity in both
				systems, but in B the two light planes do not have equal
				energies.
 Another
				crucial error in this thought problem is that Einstein applies
				his transform γ only to the planes of light, L/2 and L/2. He
				does not transform the mass, velocity, or energy of the body
				directly. Those transforms are implications of the thought
				experiment, but they are calculated indirectly, as results of
				these very energy equations. In truth, the masses are applied to
				the energies somewhat willy-nilly, and a rigorous explanation has
				never yet been provided.
 The problem can be solved down from the energy equations, of
				course, but it is a curious method, especially as it stood (and
				still stands, until the publication of this paper) as the first
				and only method. To solve from the energy equations one must be
				extremely careful to keep all the hidden variables in order.
				Einstein does not do this, as I show in the paragraphs that
				follow. But the greater problem is that solving by this method
				keeps those variables in the dark. In solving a problem for the
				first time, a scientist or mathematician should put all the
				variables in plain view, showing how they are transformed
				directly. He should not derive them indirectly by a compact but
				impenetrable method. This problem is the perfect example of that.
				Einstein has not been corrected for a century due to the
				obtuseness of his proofs. In my opinion, it would have been more
				helpful to do transforms on the basic variables, those being mass
				and velocity, and then to build energy equation from those. As it
				is the conceptual basis for relativistic mass, momentum and
				kinetic energy has been keep under a cloud from the
				beginning.
 As a first
				example of this cloud, notice that if you insert m0c2
				into the last equation above, as
				Einstein did later and as history still does, this implies that L
				= m0c2.
				Not E0 but
				L. In the beginning of the equations, E0
				is assumed to be the rest energy of
				the particle. At the end, Einstein and history have assigned m0c2
				to E0.
				But according to these equations, L = m0c2.
				That is, m0c2
				is not the rest energy before or
				after the emission of the light, it is the change in rest energy.
				It is the energy equivalence of the planes of light.
 
 You
				may say that the situation is different when Einstein expressly
				assigns m0c2*
				to the rest energy. In that problem ("Dynamics of the Slowly
				Accelerated Electron," last part of section 10 of On
				the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies,
				1905) he applies a force from an electrostatic field, taking the
				electron from rest to v. There is no L involved.
 No, there is not. But the situation is directly analogous,
				otherwise how could it yield the exact same equation? In it, the
				electron starts at rest with a given energy. Let us call it E0
				again, as above. If we apply all the
				electric force at the first instant, to complete the analogy to
				the light planes being emitted, then we can follow the problem in
				the same way, without calculus.** The body reaches v
				instantaneously, and we want to know how much energy it has
				gained from the force. Einstein has his electron accelerate
				slowly, but that is only to avoid giving off radiation. That is,
				it is an experimental concern, not a theoretical concern.
 D =
				the energy gained from the electrical force
 E0
				= E1
				- D
 Einstein says the field imparts a velocity to the electron. So
				the electron is now the moving body. Let us assign it to B, the
				observer being at rest in A. It is the electron that is moving,
				not us. It would be even more precise to say that the electron is
				B. It is not moving in B; it is the system B itself.
 H0
				= H1
				- bD
				where b is
				the transformation term.
 But, the electron starts at rest relative to A and B, therefore
				H0 =
				E0
 K1
				- K0
				= H1
				- E1
				- (H0
				- E0)
				= H1 -
				E1
 
 But K0 =
				0 since the electron has no kinetic energy at rest in both
				systems. So:
 K1
				= H1
				- E1
 = H0 +
				bD
				- (E0 +
				D)
 K1 =
				bD
				- D
 
 The kinetic energy is equal to the total energy
				measured from a distance minus the total energy measured from the
				body. And this is the energy taken from the field as measured
				from A minus the energy taken from the field as measured by B.
				This is precisely equivalent to the example with the light
				planes—substituting D for L—except that in one the body (the
				electron) is the moving system and is gaining energy, and in the
				other the body is the at-rest system and is losing energy.
 Here again, though, if
				you insert m0c2
				as it has been historically into the
				last equation, you find that it is equal to D, not to E0.
				D is the energy gained from the field, by Einstein's own variable
				assignments. E0
				≠ m0c2
 
 *Einstein
				assigns the variable in question (my D above) to mc2
				not m0c2.
				He assumes that m stands for the rest mass here, since the
				electron starts from rest. Unfortunately, the rest mass changes
				during the acceleration (which is what he is trying to prove) so
				that m is not the final rest mass. It is the initial rest mass.
				This conflicts with later interpretations and assignments of the
				kinetic energy equation. Regardless, D is not assignable to any
				mass of the electron.
 
 **Einstein actually uses calculus,
				and provides us with a single equation: K = ∫ εXdx = m∫
				β3vdv. This
				kind of math is not helpful in creating a new theory, since
				precisely none of the concepts are enumerated.
 
 Also
				notice that, just as in the proofs of Special Relativity,
				Einstein has failed to assign v to either system A or B. This
				must affect his calculations. Nor does he consider that kinetic
				energy can be calculated from either system, A or B. If A can
				calculate a velocity relative to B, then A can also calculate a
				kinetic energy. He does not specify where K is measured from. The
				form of the equations implies that K is measured from B, but this
				is not a necessity. The fact that Einstein does not carry into
				this problem a v', as I do, has had long-reaching consequences.
 And finally, gamma
				is an incorrect transform, as I have
				proven elsewhere. It is incorrect mainly because Einstein never
				saw the existence of v', from the beginning. And, even if gamma
				had been correct as a transform for
				mass and time in Special Relativity, it still should not have
				been applied to the light rays here. Physics already had a
				transform for frequency that had nothing to do with Special
				Relativity. This transform always has been equivalent to my basic
				transform alpha.
 
 Because he does not have enough variables or coordinate
				systems, Einstein has once again been forced to finesse his math.
				He has done so in several places, in fact. In the first thought
				problem, the initial trick is letting L/2 stand for half the
				emitted light. Splitting his variable so that it yields a
				two-term equation is done only to ensure that it cancels
				properly. The second trick is using a transformation term that
				has a 1+ and a 1- in the numerator that also cancels out. This is
				not just luck. Nor is it necessity. As I will show, it is much
				more convenient to choose the send the planes of light straight
				ahead and straight back, since then they are all in the same line
				as the given v. Everything is then in the x-direction. Why does
				Einstein choose an angle? He chooses it because it is the best
				way to finesse this equation. If he lets the planes of light be
				emitted in a line, he gets into all kinds of trouble. His split
				equations won't cancel out in that case, according to his own
				faulty theory, since Einstein's transforms are the same
				regardless of direction. In using the angles, as he has, he
				ensures they cancel, but only at the cost of theoretical
				consistency. Mathematically they cancel. Conceptually they do
				not, as I have shown. The observer in B should see the body
				change direction, and Einstein cannot explain why this does not
				happen.
 Einstein's
				equations do not distinguish between movement toward and movement
				away. He says that moving things act the same, no matter the
				direction. Therefore the energy of both planes of light should
				increase from the point of view of B. If the body had sent out
				electrons instead of planes of light, Einstein would have found
				both the electron receding and the electron approaching the
				observer in B to be slowed and mass-increased. But this is false,
				as I will show.
 Finally,
				Einstein finesses the equations by assigning (in the last
				equation of either problem) the first term to the kinetic energy
				and the second term to the rest energy. Like this,
 K0
				- K1
				=          
				m0c2      
				-       
				m0c2}
 √[1 - (v2/c2)]
 Einstein
				says that the second term (the term on the right) applies to the
				rest energy of the particle. There is no reason to do this. It is
				an equation with two terms, but the terms are not divisible or
				singly assignable without a very compelling reason and a full
				explanation. I have shown that the two terms are simply the
				outcome of a finessed equation. There is no necessary physical
				reality to either term.
 
 To clarify this, let's look again
				at the light-plane problem. At the end Einstein finds that K0
				- K1
				= γ L - L
 If L = m0c2
				, then what is the value of E0?
				Let us see.
 E0
				= E1
				+ L
 The initial rest energy = the final rest energy + the rest
				energy? This only makes sense if the final term is understood to
				be the change in rest energy. L is actually the mass equivalent
				of the planes of light. Even if Einstein's final equation were
				correct in form (it isn't), it would imply that m0c2
				is the mass equivalent of the light,
				not of the body. But this is not what m0c2
				means in current energy equations.
 
 Now let's look at the calculus derivation of E = mc2
				from a current textbook. It follows
				Einstein pretty closely—meaning it makes all the mistakes he
				makes, and then adds a few of its own. The problem for the
				textbooks is that they try to clarify some of the things that
				Einstein purposely kept in the shadows. They try to apply real
				math to things that Einstein simply glossed over. Unfortunately,
				they are no more thorough than he was.
 The first thing they do is state that they take the Work-energy
				Theorem as still valid in Relativity. This is false. It is valid,
				but not with the same equations. Remember that Einstein throws
				out the classical equation for kinetic energy. In fact, the
				textbook finds, at the end of these very equations, that E ≠
				mv2/2
				. But it assumes, for some reason, that the integral based on
				this equation is valid!
 W = ∫ Fdx = ∫ dpdx/dt = ∫
				vdp
 But this is absurd,
				since according to Einstein, energy is not expressed in the same
				terms in relativity as it is in classical mechanics. The integral
				∫ Fdx works because F = ma and v = x/t , etc.
 From this they get
 W = ∫ dpv - ∫ pdv
 but p ≠ mv in
				relativity. You can't just juggle the same old variables for a
				few steps and then suddenly introduce a mass substitution to make
				it all right. But this is what is done.
 W = mv2
				- ∫      
				m0v
				    dv
 √[1 - (v2/c2)]
 = mv2 +
				mc2[1
				- (v2/c2)]
				- m0c2
 and so on
 
 Notice that if
				we so much as lose the square root of the gamma
				term, then the integration is
				ruined. You have no third term from v = 0 as you do in the
				current integration. So you have no m0c2
				term. But it does not matter since
				the integration was compromised long before that.
 The textbook I have in hand says this (which is typical): "We
				call mc2
				the total energy of the body, and we
				see that the total energy equals the rest energy plus the kinetic
				energy."
 mc2
				= m0c2
				+ K
 But this assigning of physical realities to the terms in the
				equations is completely ad
				hoc, whether it is done
				by Einstein or the current textbooks. As I have shown above, the
				equation works in the same way whether the particle starts from
				rest or not. In these equations, m0c2
				is the change in rest energy, not
				the initial rest energy or the rest energy at zero. And notice
				that mc2
				has been assigned to the total
				energy with no mathematical or theoretical proof whatsoever. With
				the givens we have in Einstein's thought problems, the real mass
				of the body or electron is not calculable or assignable, beyond
				the given E0.
 
 
 
 Part
				TwoA Correction for Einstein's Thought Problem
 The
				first thing to do, before I derive new equations for mass
				increase and energy, is to correct the thought problem I have
				just critiqued. If I have asserted that Einstein has made
				mistakes, I should rerun the problem in the right way. 
 
  
 Let
				us return to the light-plane problem. I will get rid of the
				angles of emission, leaving the light to travel only along the
				x-axis. One plane of light travels directly toward the observer
				in B, and one plane directly away. Since with light the energy is
				dependent on the frequency, not the speed, we need linear
				transforms for frequency, not velocity. The light moving in the
				+direction of v will be red-shifted, since although it is moving
				toward the observer in B, the observer is moving away from it. As
				regards the other plane of light, the case is a bit more subtle.
				That light is not moving toward the observer at all. It is wrong
				to say that an object moving away from an observer has a kinetic
				energy, since that object cannot possibly do any work for the
				observer. To be even more precise, light moving away from an
				observer cannot be known to exist at all. However, we can measure
				the energy of the incoming light, and we can see—or we are
				given—that the emitting body has not changed speed or
				direction. Therefore, the receding light must have an equal but
				opposite energy to the incoming light. This is only an inference
				though, and may not be measured or seen directly. Let us see if
				we can express this in equations. I am assuming the given
				velocity is B as measured from A.
 Einstein's nomenclature is (purposefully) confusing so I am going
				to call the L/2 incoming F0 and the L/2 receding G0.
 If F1 is the
				energy of the light as measured by B, then
 αF1 =
				F0     since F1 <
				F0
 F0 = -G0
 The energy of a plane of light is dependent only upon its
				frequency, since its velocity is always c. E = hf, where h is
				Planck's constant and f is frequency. The transform for frequency
				is
 f' = αf
 Which
				makes the transform for the energy of a light plane
 E' =
				αE
 Amazingly, this is
				the current transform for frequency, as used by scientists for
				decades. Richard Feynman used it in his explanations of Special
				Relativity, at the same time that he was corroborating gamma
				and other mathematical falsehoods. So my alpha has been a
				common transform in optics for several generations. But until now
				it has not been properly tied to Special Relativity and the mass
				transforms.
 The magnitude
				of the energy of G1 must equal F1,
				otherwise the observer in B would see the body change velocity or
				direction after emission. We are told that it does not change
				velocity. It stays at rest in A, and keeps velocity v in B. We
				could express the direction of the planes of light as angles of 0
				and 180, to mirror Einstein, but notice that it is completely
				unnecessary in this sort of problem. We are only interested in
				vectors, not in angles. Both planes of light end up being
				subtracted from the mass of the body. Einstein's use of 1 + cos
				and 1 - cos, etc. was just false bombast. This is the way the
				equations should go:
 E0 = E1 + F0
				- G0
 E0 - E1 = 2F0
 H0 = H1 + F1 - G1
				     [We are dealing with energy as a vector,
				remember!]
 H0 - H1 = 2F0/α
 You may say, shouldn't
				the light plane traveling in the -x direction have a blue shift,
				and a transform that is the inverse of the red-shift transform?
				No. Light is blue shifted if it is traveling toward the observer
				and the observer is traveling toward it (or if the point of
				emission is traveling toward the observer-which you see is the
				same thing). A light plane traveling in the -x direction is
				neither blue-shifted nor red-shifted, nor subject to any possible
				transformation. It is invisible and undetectable, except by
				inference.
 Now, Einstein
				says the initial kinetic energy of the body is represented by the
				equation K0 = H0 - E0
 And the final kinetic energy is represented by K1 = H1
				- E1
 So that
				the change in kinetic energy is
 K1 - K0
				= H1 - E1 - (H0 - E0)
 K1
				- K0 = -2F0/α + 2F0
 Now, if we want to put L back in, and solve, we get
 L = 2F0
 ΔK
				= L[1 - (1/α)]
 ΔK = L(v/c)
 
 The body lost the mass
				equivalent of the light but gained kinetic energy. This is simply
				because the body had a negative kinetic energy to start with. It
				was moving away from the observer and therefore could do no work.
				Its loss of the energy of the light gave it a smaller negative
				kinetic energy, which is of course a positive vector
				change.
 Einstein had to
				finesse his equations to get a positive number at the end. I have
				shown how to analyze the vectors correctly.
 
 You can see
				that I have done a lot of housecleaning. The way I dealt with the
				planes of light was quite different than Einstein. Notice, for
				one thing, that I would never let the planes of light be emitted
				in any other way than the way I did. Why? Because any other
				planes of light, emitted at any angle to the x-axis, will be
				undetectable from B. Einstein assumes that B can perform
				transformation equations on light that never even comes to B.
				Light emitted at any angle will never reach B, and is therefore
				not a source of possible calculation. In that case all energy
				changes will be inferences; none will be measurements.
				Which would make Einstein's thought problem a fantasy from
				beginning to end, rather than a meaningful potential
				experiment.
 Furthermore,
				if m0c2 is inserted into the equation, then
				L = m0c2. In this problem, according to
				Einstein's own assignments, this is the mass equivalence of the
				emitted planes of light, not the rest mass of the object.
 Finally, my corrections
				make it clear that L/α cannot be assigned to mc2.
				Currently, Einstein's theory assigns m0c2
				to L and mc2 to γL (which is my L/α). He says that
				ET = γL. But this is false, according to his own
				variable assignments. From the equations above and current
				theory, we have ET = H1 + K = H1
				+ γL - L
 H1 ≠ L Therefore, ET ≠ γL
 Above I showed that ET
				≠ H1. Here I have shown that ET ≠ γL.
				The truth is that ET is not singly assignable to any
				of Einstein's energy variables; nor is it assignable to mc2.
				Since I have thrown out Einstein's method for deriving mass
				increase equations, I must now derive them on my own, using my
				own thought problems.
 
 
 
 Part
				ThreeThought Experiment 3
 Let us
				say that we have a tiny ball containing a device that emits
				light. It is able to emit light one photon at a time, with a
				known energy. At a distance of 300,000km from this ball is a
				mirror that reflects directly back to the ball. This distance has
				been measured locally (by walking it, say). It is a given, not a
				measurement by the ball after emission. Also, the zero-point of
				the experiment is marked on the ground with a white line, so that
				an observer may be placed there. 
 
  
 We
				run the experiment twice. The first time the device in the ball
				emits a photon toward the mirror at T' = 0s, and then receives
				the same photon upon its return from the mirror (it does not
				re-absorb the photon, it simply measures it with an instrument).
				T' is the time on the ball's clock. At the beginning of the
				experiment, just before the emission of the photons, T' = T. That
				is, the clocks of the zero point and the ball are synchronized.
 The second time, the
				device emits a photon at T' = 0s, another at T' = 1s, and then
				another at T' = 2s. The observer at the zero-point intercepts the
				second and third photons from the ball in order to calculate
				where the ball is after T' = T = 0. This observer also intercepts
				the first photon returning from the mirror.
 By the conservation of momentum, the ball must recoil in the
				opposite direction from the emission of the photon. When the
				photon returns, the distance the ball has traveled may be
				measured, and the inertial mass of the ball may be determined.
 
 Question: will the mass of the ball as calculated from
				the ball be equivalent to the mass of the ball as calculated from
				the zero point of the experiment? If not, how will they differ?
 L
				= distance from zero-point to mirror
 E = energy of photon = 1
				x 10-19J
				(say)
 m' = mass of ball, measured by the ball
 v' = velocity
				of ball, measured from the ball
 Let us calculate from the ball, first of all. In this case, the
				ball is the measurer, and the system of the ball is therefore the
				S' system—the primed system (I make the local system the primed
				system simply to be consistent with my other paper). What does
				the ball see?
 The
				simplest thing to do is to let the photon return all the way to
				the ball. We could let the photon return to the zero-point and
				then let a signal be triggered, but that seems redundant, since
				the signal would have to be a light signal.
 Let the ball be very tiny, to be sure it travels a nice long
				distance. But do not assume it reaches velocity instantaneously
				(this will be important later). When the photon arrives back at
				the ball, the ball looks at its clock and discovers that 2.5
				seconds have elapsed. The ball thinks, "This is very easy.
				The light took one second to get over to the mirror and one
				second to get back, and half a second to reach me. If the mirror
				is 300,000km from the zero-point, then I am 150,000km from the
				zero-point. I went that far in 2.5s, therefore my average
				velocity (relative to the system of the zero-point) is:
 v'av
				= 150,000km/2.5s = 60,000km/s
 By the conservation of momentum, the momentum of the light must
				be equal to the momentum of the ball:
 E/c = m'v'av
 m'
				= E/cv'av
				= 1 x 10-19J/(3
				x 108m/s)(6
				x 107m/s)
 = 5.55 x 10-36kg
 
 Now
				let us calculate from the zero-point. The first photon arrives at
				the zero-point in 2 seconds, according to the clock at the
				zero-point. The observer at the zero-point then must measure the
				distance the ball has appeared to travel. The observer does this
				by receiving the other photons from the ball. We could use the
				t-equation from my previous paper, to calculate the difference
				between the period of the ball and the period of the zero-point.
				This would be the most direct way to calculate, since the only
				data the zero-point is receiving from the ball is ticks. [The
				zero-point is able to calculate velocity simply from receiving
				ticks, since the zero-point knows the local period of the ball.
				When the ball was at rest at the zero-point, at the beginning of
				the experiment, it's period was 1s.] However, since we have
				already calculated the velocity of the ball according to the
				ball, I am going to skip this step and use my velocity
				transformation equation instead. If the ball calculates its own
				velocity to be 60,000km/s, then the observer at the zero point
				will calculate (by receiving ticks) the velocity to be:
 t =
				t' + x'/c
 t' is a given as 1s. t is incoming data. Therefore
				x' and v' and v may be calculated.
 v =       
				v'
 1 + (v'/c)
 vav
				=       
				v'av
 1 + (2v'av/c)
 vav
				=       
				6 x 104km/s
 1 + (12 x 104/3
				x 105)
 = 42,857km/s
 
 (Again, the zero-point could have arrived at
				this number without knowing v'av.
				This is of some importance below.)
 m = E/cvav
 = 7.77 x 10-36kg
 
 The
				mass of the ball has appeared to increase, if measured from the
				zero-point, as compared to measurement from the ball itself. This
				much is consistent with the findings of Einstein: mass appears to
				increase as time dilates. But the transformation term is
				obviously different. I have used a variation of my velocity term
				alpha
				rather than gamma.
 
 Now,
				one may ask, which mass is correct? The mass measured from the
				zero-point or the mass measured from the ball? Either mass
				conserves momentum, as long as we keep it in its own equation.
				But you can see that the mass as calculated by the ball itself
				must be the correct moving mass, since it is connected to the
				correct velocity. The zero-point calculates a larger mass only
				because it has used an incorrect velocity. Its visual data has
				been skewed by time dilation, making the velocity wrong and then
				the mass.
 
 Next, one may ask, what was the rest mass in
				this problem? Well, there must be three calculable rest masses:
				the rest mass before the emission and two rest masses after (the
				ball and the zero-point will calculate different rest masses,
				unfortunately).
 mrB
				= rest mass of the ball, before emission
 mrAB
				= rest mass of the ball calculated by the ball, after
				emission
 mrAZ
				= rest mass of the ball calculated by the zero-point, after
				emission
 m0B
				= mass equivalence of the photon, as measured by the ball
 m0Z
				= mass equivalence of the photon, as measured by the zero-point
 The photon will have two
				mass equivalents, since the photon will have a different energy
				relative to the ball than it will have relative to the
				zero-point. The ball is moving away from the photon when the
				photon returns, so that its energy will be redshifted. E'<
				E.
 E = m0Zc2
				= the energy of the photon relative to the zero-point
 E' =
				m0Bc2
				= the energy of the photon relative to the ball
 mrAB=
				mrB
				- m0B
 We can solve since we also know that mvav
				= m'vav'
				= E/c
 m = m0Zc/vav
 m0Z
				= m(vav/c)
 m0Z
				= (m - m')/2
 = 1.11 x
				10-36kg
 which agrees with our given value for its energy.
 m0Z
				= αm0B
 m0B
				= 7.9 x 10-37kg
 Now all we need is the rest mass. Some will think that is just
				the mass measured by the ball, since that is the only mass that
				is truly at rest with regard to its background. But the ball,
				using the equation above, is calculating with redshifted light.
				This means that its value for the mass equivalence of the photon
				is incorrect. In this way my thought problem is not like that of
				Einstein. In the light planes problem, the body is at rest and
				the observer is moving away. Therefore the body measures the
				normal frequency and the observer sees a redshift. But in my
				thought problem, the observer at the zero-point sees the normal
				frequency and the ball sees the redshift.
 Upon emission the ball lost a certain amount of energy. This
				amount of energy is expressed by E, not by E'. Therefore, the
				rest mass relative to the zero-point must be calculated with E.
				This is simply because we must imagine that the ball was not
				moving at the instant of emission. The ball did not start moving
				until the instant after T0.
				Emission took place at T0
				, therefore the light has its normal frequency relative to the
				zero-point.
 This seems
				somewhat strange at first, since the ball is not at rest relative
				to the zero-point. How can we calculate a rest mass for it
				relative to the zero-point; and what is more, why would we want
				to? We want to in order to get the correct energy equations. If
				we work with the wrong rest mass, we will get the wrong
				equations. We must use the rest mass that is at rest relative to
				the light. That is the only true rest mass, in any problem
				whatsoever. You will say, "doesn't Relativity imply that all
				bodies are at rest relative to light, since light travels c
				relative to all bodies?" Relativity does say that light
				travels c relative to all bodies, and it is correct to do so;
				however, it is quite obvious that a body that is measuring red or
				blueshifted light is not at rest relative to that light. The true
				rest mass of any body will be calculated from unshifted
				light—that is to say, light with a normal frequency (see a full
				definition of "normal frequency" below).
 And so, in this particular problem, I must seek the rest mass
				relative to the zero-point. How can I find it, since I don't yet
				have an equation for it? All I need is a mass after emission from
				which to subtract my photon from. I have two masses, m and m',
				but m' is the correct mass since it is connected to the correct
				velocity. The variable v' was measured locally, meaning that the
				t variable did not need to be transformed. That makes m' a
				reliable mass. But it is not the rest mass itself. It is a moving
				mass. To find the rest mass, we simply subtract the mass
				equivalence of the photon from m'.
 mrAZ
				= m' - m0Z
				= 4.44 x 10-36kg
 The rest mass before
				emission is just the photon added back in:
 mrB
				= 5.55 x 10-36kg
				= m'
 Whenever I speak of
				rest mass from now on (concerning this problem with the ball) I
				will be talking about mrAZ,
				but I will simplify the notation, taking it back to mr.
 
 We should take note that all these masses were calculated
				from an average velocity over the interval of acceleration up to
				a final velocity. If we had used a final velocity, we would have
				found a mass equivalence for the photon that was twice too
				little. This final velocity is not used in the mass or momentum
				transforms; but it will be used in the energy transforms, simply
				so that I may be sure to derive equations that are analogous to
				the ones that are currently used. The current energy equations
				are used given a final velocity. In many experimental situations,
				the scientist does not know or is not concerned with how the
				particle reached velocity. His or her only data is a final
				velocity.*
 Some might
				complain that the ball must use m0B
				since that is the mass it would calculate from the frequency of
				light it actually sees. But since we have as one of our givens
				the fact that the ball knows it is moving and is already
				calculating a velocity for itself relative to the background of
				the zero-point, it is not difficult to require that the ball
				notice that the normal frequency of light is f rather than f'.
 
 Both the observer at the zero-point and the ball itself
				are calculating a moving mass when they use a momentum equation,
				since the momentum equation includes a velocity. The variable m'
				could hardly be understood as a rest mass, since it was
				calculated from an equation that describes movement.
 Using other methods than this experiment (such as a gravitational
				method), the zero-point would have found the rest mass of the
				ball to be 5.55 x 10-36kg,
				before the experiment. It then would have calculated the moving
				mass to be 7.77 x 10-36kg,
				from an experiment like this one—a mass that would appear to be
				confirmed by any subsequent collision of the ball, since the
				momentum equation used by the zero-point would be assumed to be
				correct. The momentum would in fact be correct, but neither the
				velocity nor the mass would be.
 Some may want to calculate a momentum using mr,
				to find that the ball also miscalculated its velocity. p = mrvr.
				But this cannot be done. A rest mass is at rest, by definition,
				and can have neither velocity nor momentum nor kinetic energy.
				The rest mass is defined as the mass at rest relative to the
				normal frequency of light.
 
 As you can see, the momentum
				is the same measured from either the ball or the zero-point,
				which is just as it must be: mvav
				= m'v'av.
				It could hardly be otherwise, since the masses were calculated
				from a momentum equation in the first place. All we have had to
				do is keep our variables in order, so that we understand
				precisely what we have been given and what we are seeking in each
				event and with each solution.
 
 Finally, let me address the
				comment that E/c = m'v'av
				cannot be the correct equation describing the initial situation,
				since the ball will not receive the photon back from the mirror
				at energy E. It is true that when the first photon returns to the
				ball its frequency will have changed, due to the movement of the
				ball. Because E = hf, the ball will receive the photon at E', not
				at E, and E'< E.
 However, we do not use E' in this equation for this reason: we
				are not concerned with the energy the photon has when it returns
				to the ball, not from any vantage; we are concerned with the
				energy the photon has when it leaves the ball. The equation E/c =
				m'v'av
				describes an equality of numbers, when all the numbers are
				relative to the same background. This background is the
				background of the zero-point, or the background of the ball
				before it gained a velocity. You may say, no, the variables as
				measured against that background are unprimed variables, by
				definition. The primed variables I have said are measured from
				the ball. However, if you think this, you are not being rigorous
				enough in your variable assignments. Just as in my first paper,
				the variable assignments here are very subtle, and we now must
				write them out in full, to avoid confusion.
 v' is the velocity
				of the ball relative to the zero-point, as measured from the
				ball.
 v is the velocity of the ball relative to the
				zero-point, as measured from the zero-point.
 
 There is no
				velocity of the ball measured by the ball, relative to the ball.
				In the same way, E' is not just the energy as measured by the
				ball, it is the energy of the returning photon relative to the
				ball. It is not the energy we want for any of our equations.
 Both velocity
				measurements above have the same background. Therefore in the
				equation E/c = m'v'av,
				E must also be measured against this background. E must be the
				original given energy of the photon.
 
 Before we continue,
				I wish to make one final comment regarding this problem. We have
				just seen that light may have a different frequency depending
				upon who measures it. Of course this is not news: we have known
				of redshifts for decades. But our experiment above has shown us
				that frequency may be privileged just as I have privileged
				certain measurements of velocity and mass. What is the privileged
				measurement of light? The measured frequency of light is normal,
				and therefore privileged, when the system that measures the ray
				or photon is at rest relative to the point of emission. That is
				fairly straightforward, I think, besides appealing to common
				sense. This effectively privileges the point of emission of light
				regarding measurement of the light's frequency. Notice it is just
				the opposite of the privileging of time, velocity and mass to the
				local system. Local time cannot be wrong. But the measurement of
				the frequency of light can be wrong, from what we have heretofore
				called a local system. The ball was the local system above, but
				it would have measured f', which is not the normal frequency.
 
 If you say, we can't privilege certain fields like
				that—how can we know if we are moving relative to the light
				source? Well, I say, we can't always know. But it is possible to
				know in certain situations, from spectra shifts. The fact that it
				is possible to know means that there is a pre-existing fact.
				Light does have a normal frequency. For instance, we know, due to
				stability, that the sun is not moving relative to us. It is
				neither approaching the earth, nor fleeing it. Therefore
				measurements of the frequencies of sunlight from the earth are
				privileged. Notice, however, that measurements of sunlight from
				the sun are not privileged, since the sun is moving through
				space. You will say, it doesn't matter, since the sunlight is
				moving away from the sun, and is therefore undetectable from the
				sun. But sunlight reflected back to the sun could be measured
				from the sun. [See my
				paper on the mirror experiment to replace Michelson/Morley].
 
 
 
 Part
				Four New Mass Transforms
 These
				then are the new mass transform equations, for one degree of
				relativity, if the object is moving away from the measurer.
				[alpha must be modified if the object is moving toward the
				measurer—see below for modification process; or see paper on
				velocity transforms for full proof of modification.]mvav
				= m'v'av
 mv'av /[1 + (2v'av/c)]
				= m'v'av
 m = m'[1 + (2v'av/c)] = m'α
 where m' is local mass and m is measured from a distance
 What
				if we want to use vav instead of v'av?
 m
				= m'/[1 - (2vav/c)] = m'α
 
 However, these
				equations tell only part of the story, as the above thought
				problem made clear. The observer at the zero-point would
				calculate the ball to have a moving mass of
 m'/[1 -
				(2vav/c)]
 but if the ball subsequently came to rest
				relative to that observer and was weighed by him, it would weigh
 mr = m' - m0Z
 m0Z =
				m(vav/c)
 mr = m' - m(vav/c)
 m'
				= m[1 - (2vav/c)]
 mr = m[1 - (2vav/c)]
				- m(vav/c)
 = m[1 - (2vav/c) - (vav/c)]
 mr
				= m[1 - (3vav/c)]
 m = mr/[1 -
				(3vav/c)]
 
 I will call this transform beta.
 beta
				= β = 1/[1 - (3vav/c)]
 
 This is a very
				important equation, since it mirrors many experimental
				situations. Already you can see that there are many equations
				involved with mass increase, and the correct one must be chosen
				for the situation. Just as with velocity, we must take into
				account the direction of relative motion. In addition, we must
				take into account which mass we are seeking, which mass or
				momentum we are given, and precisely what we are transforming to
				and from.
 
 In the thought problem we have just solved, the
				mass changed twice, for two reasons: firstly, it changed because
				the ball emitted a photon. This changed the mass even from the
				point of view of the ball, of course. So this is not a
				consideration of Relativity. Secondly, it changed from the point
				of view of the observer, since a velocity was involved. This
				second change required a mass transform due to Relativity.
 The first change of mass
				was not a concern of Special Relativity, meaning it was a mass
				change that could be (and was) calculated without Relativity
				Transforms.
 
 
 
 Part
				FiveMass Transforms from one velocity to another
 Now
				let us find equations for a velocity change that is not from
				zero. Let us imagine an even simpler situation. Let us say that a
				ball of local mass m' starts out with a local velocity of v1'
				and ends with a local velocity of v2'. Will its mass
				appear to increase from a distance? Let us assume (at first) that
				its local mass will not change, since no particle is being
				emitted in order to accomplish a higher velocity, as with the
				photon emission above. First we must specify a direction. Let us
				say it is moving directly toward an observer or a zero-point. In
				this case we will not have to make the velocity or the momentum
				negative. For notice that once we start talking about momentum
				and kinetic energy, we must think in terms of vectors. Objects
				moving away will have negative momenta and negative kinetic
				energies.Now let us take
				a closer look at these givens. Are they possible? Is it possible
				for a ball to change velocity without changing its total energy?
				Of course not. But can it change total energy without changing
				its local mass? That is a subtler question. As we saw above, the
				ball gained a velocity by emitting a photon. Its rest mass
				therefore changed. In many other situations, especially in
				particle physics, the local or rest mass of the body in question
				will be affected by a field or by bombardment, since photons or
				positrons or neutrinos or other small particles will be emitted
				or absorbed. It may be that no transfer of energy is possible,
				even on the macro-level, without a change in mass. However, we
				will assume that some transfers are totally elastic (nothing
				sticks or is emitted). At the macro-level this will always be an
				approximation (although often negligible); at the micro-level it
				will likely always be a falsification. But for this part of the
				problem, we will assume that the ball changes velocity without
				changing its rest mass or local mass.
 The initial momentum of the ball as measured by the ball is given
				by the equation m'v1' and its final momentum by
				m'v2'.
 But in
				an experiment where energy or momentum is the yield, then the
				mass will be calculated down from the momentum equation. In this
				case, the velocity will be measured from a distance, obviously.
				Scientists do not measure the local velocity of quanta, or
				anything else. So these scientists will be using these equations
				for the initial momentum and the final momentum:
 pi
				= mivi       where the
				i stands for initial
 pf = mfvf  
				   " final
 Since there is only one energy output at collision, no matter
				where it is measured from
 mivi =
				m'v1'
 mfvf = m'v2'
 v'
				= v/(1 + v/c)
 v1' = vi/(1 + vi/c)
 v2'
				= vf/(1 + vf/c)
 m' = mfvf/v2'
 mivi
				= v1'mfvf /v2'
 mi/mf
				= vf/(1 + vi/c)//vf/(1 +
				vf/c)
 = (1 + vf/c)/(1 + vi/c)
 mf
				= mi (1 + vi/c)/(1 + vf/c) =
				mi(c + vi)/(c + vf)
 
 If
				the final velocity is greater than the initial velocity, the
				final mass must be less than the initial mass. For an approaching
				object, there is an apparent mass decrease. Obviously this is
				just to keep the momentum the same. If you are measuring its
				velocity and getting a number that is too high (compared to the
				real value) then you must measure the mass to be too low, so that
				when it hits you, the real momentum and your calculated momentum
				are the same thing. If the object were moving away, then you
				would once again calculate a mass increase.
 And there is your mass transform. It has two v's, unlike
				Einstein's equation; and this is very convenient, since it allows
				us to calculate from initial to final.
 Now let's see if my term causes more change than Einstein or
				less.
 If vi = c/4 and vf = c/2
				then
 gamma = 1.03
 my term = 1.2
 Somewhat greater
				change in mass.
 
 What if the initial velocity is zero?
 If
				vi = 0, then mf = mi /[1 +
				(vf/c)] = mi/(c + vf)
 
 Of
				course, in the same way we can derive a transformation from local
				velocities, if we want.
 vi = v1'/[1 -
				(v1'/c)]
 vf = v2'/[1 -
				(v2'/c)]
 mivi = v1'mfvf
				/v2'
 mf = mi(1
				-v2'/c)
 1 - v1'/c
 
 You may be surprised to find that the
				body can calculate its own mass increase due to velocity. But if
				it can calculate its own velocity, it can calculate its own mass
				increase. The body itself would of course interpret this not as a
				real change in mass, but as a change in mass equivalence relative
				to its background. The body, for itself, has not gained mass but
				kinetic energy. The classical interpretation would be that this
				is kinetic energy and nothing else. The modern interpretation is
				that mass is a sort of energy, especially in a momentum equation,
				so that they may be lumped together. I prefer to think of the
				measurement of mass from the object itself as the moving mass.
				The object must then do further calculations to obtain its own
				rest mass.
 
 The question is, can we also use these
				equations to transform from a local mass at rest to a relative
				mass at velocity? Let us set the initial velocity to zero, in
				which case the initial mass in the relative system should equal
				to the local mass or rest mass. mi = m0. We
				know this not from the momentum equations, but by definition. In
				which case
 mf = mr/(1 + vf/c)
 This
				is only if the object is moving toward the observer, since we
				simplified an equation from that problem. The mass variables
				would switch if the object were moving away:
 (Eq. 1) mr
				= mf[1 - (vf/c)]
 However, we now have
				two equations for the same situation, and they don't match. Even
				if we switch directions, the equation we found above isn't
				equivalent:
 (Eq. 2) mr = m[1 - (3vav/c)]
 How can we explain this?
				It is because the experimental situations aren't the same. In the
				first thought problem, the ball emits a photon in order to reach
				velocity. In the second, it doesn't. Notice that the ball has
				borrowed the energy of the photon in the first experiment. A
				scientist wouldn't necessarily know this, if he came upon the
				ball after emission, but it is an important fact of the
				equations. In the second experiment we are just imagining that
				the object goes from rest to a final velocity, and we calculate
				the mass increase due to that velocity. But again it might be
				asked, is this possible? Can an object gain or lose velocity
				without borrowing the energy of another object, by collision,
				emission, or other method? I don't think so. In any experimental
				situation, we must assume that any object under
				consideration—that is not at rest relative to our field—gained
				its velocity by some means external to our initial measurement.
				We may postulate emission, collision, or the influence of a
				field, but we may not postulate a relative velocity that was
				gained without energy transfer.
 In all
				these equations, we see a limit for the unprimed velocity
				relative to c.  The mass goes to infinity as v goes to c/2 or
				c/3.  One thing that makes this easier to understand is that I am
				not postulating a real mass approaching infinity. m is not
				a real mass. It is a measurement. I am postulating a measurement
				to approach infinity. Therefore, there is a limit to measurement;
				but the variable m does not apply to the real mass at all.  In
				all my equations and theories, the real mass is inviolable. 
 
 
 Part
				SixEinstein's Momentum Transformation Equation
 I said
				that according to my equations, momentum does not need to be
				transformed. In order to find our initial transforms for mass, we
				had to assume that the momentum of our object from the zero-point
				was equal to the momentum measured from the object itself.p'
				= p
 m'vav' = mvav
 We could not have found a mass transform otherwise. Notice that
				Einstein, despite never making this assumption, arrives at the
				same basic substitution I do. His transform for mass is the same
				as his transform for time and length, gamma. My transform
				is also unchanged. My transform for mass is the same as it was
				for time, distance and velocity: alpha. But Einstein does
				not work in the direction I do. I used my transform for velocity
				to find the mass transform. Einstein, who assumes he has no
				velocity transform in the same situation, must instead develop an
				energy transform first. Remember that in the light plane problem,
				he had no v'. So he finds an energy equation and solves down from
				there to find mass transforms and then a momentum equation.
 Like me, Einstein does
				not have a momentum transform equation. For Einstein, momentum
				can only be calculated by an observer (since he failed to
				remember that an object can calculate its own velocity). For
				Einstein,
 m'vav' cannot equal mvav,
				since Einstein has no v'.
 Instead, he finds that
 p = mv =
				γm0v
 This is
				the current equation. In it gamma is understood to be
				transforming the mass. There is no v' to transform. This is the
				major problem with the current momentum equation. It proposes to
				transform from one coordinate system to another, but it does so
				without transforming the velocity. That is to say, this equation
				assumes that v is correct-that it is unaffected by relativity.
				Einstein is transforming m0 (which is in the
				coordinate system that is going v) to the coordinate system of
				the observer (which is the unprimed system here). The unprimed
				system is the system of the scientist measuring the particle
				whizzing by. But Einstein does not transform the velocity. He
				finds a velocity transform in Special Relativity, but he does not
				use it in the momentum equation. Why? One must suppose it is
				because the velocity transform he finds there is for two degrees
				of relativity, and he does not think it applies in this
				situation. I have shown in my previous paper that it does apply.
				The given velocity v is affected by relativity and must be
				transformed. It is affected by the speed of light. Why would the
				speed of light affect mass but not velocity, requiring a mass
				transform but no velocity transform?
 Einstein's m0 is equivalent in math and theory to my
				mr. Therefore his equation for momentum is equivalent
				to this
 p = xmrvav
 what does x equal,
				using my transformation terms?
 p = mvav
 x =
				m/mr = α
 p = αmrvav
 In my theory, this last equation is not a momentum
				transformation. It is not transforming from one coordinate system
				to another. It is simply expressing the momentum in terms of a
				rest mass. The relativity transforms are between m and m'.
				Technically you cannot calculate a momentum from a rest mass,
				since a rest mass is not moving. But if, for some theoretical
				reason, you want to express momentum in terms of rest mass, this
				is the equation you should use.
 
 
 
 Part
				SevenEnergy Transformation Equations
 Let us
				now return to my correction of Einstein's energy equations and
				see if we can apply them to my problem with the ball and the
				photon. First, notice
				that Einstein's thought problem is analogous to mine except for
				one thing. Upon emission of the planes of light, his body does
				not change position in system A or velocity in B. My ball,
				however, does change velocity. It goes from rest at the
				zero-point to a final velocity of v' as measured from the ball or
				v measured from the zero-point. Einstein's two planes of light
				cancel out. My one photon has no twin in the opposite direction,
				therefore the ball is given a push and it achieves a velocity. In
				this way my ball is more like Einstein's slowly accelerated
				electron. So we only need to return to Einstein's equations to
				make the proper corrections.
 E0 = the initial energy of the ball (measured by the
				ball) before emission of the photon.
 E1 = the total energy of the ball measured by the ball
				after the emission of the photon.
 H0 = the initial total energy of the ball as seen from
				the zero-point.
 H1
				= the final total energy of the ball as seen from the
				zero-point.
 F0
				= the energy of the photon as measured by the ball
 F1 = the energy of the photon as measured by the
				zero-point
 F1 = αF0    
				since F1 > F0
 E1 = E0
				- F0
 H1 = H0 - F1
 E0 = H0      since
				the ball is initially at rest in both systems, A and B
 H1
				- H0 = -F1 = -αF0
 And the
				final kinetic energy is represented by
 K = H1 -
				E1
 = H1 - (E0
				- F0)
 = H1 -
				(H0 - F0)
 =
				-αF0 + F0
 = (1
				- α)F0
 (The initial kinetic energy was zero.)
 K
				= F0{1- [1 + (v'/c)] }
 =
				-F0(v'/c)
 
 My kinetic energy is negative. It is
				negative because the ball is moving away from the zero-point. It
				can do no work upon a body positioned at the zero-point. To do +K
				amount of work on the zero-point, a force would have to be
				applied to the ball creating energy in the amount of 2K. In other
				words, a force sufficient to turn the ball around and give it v'
				in the opposite direction.
 Now that I have brought Einstein's problem into line with my own
				thought problem, I may use F1 as the energy of my
				photon. F1 = m0Zc2 (though I
				will drop the "z" after this).
 We do not need Einstein's derivation of m0c2
				here, nor the textbook's simplified calculus derivation. I have
				shown that both are false. All we need is the equation we have
				already used
 E/c = pL
 which says that the momentum of a photon is
				expressed by E/c. This equation comes from previous theory and
				has nothing to do with relativity. If we assume that light can
				have a mass equivalence, then we have
 E/c = m0v
 E
				= m0c2
 where m0 is the mass equivalence of the light. My
				photon has a mass equivalence of m0 in this particular
				problem. Putting this into my equation above yields
 K =
				-F0(v'/c)
 αF0 = F1
 K =
				-m0c2(v'/αc)
 But we want kinetic energy in terms of m' not m0.
 m0
				= m'v'/c
 K = -(m'v'/2c )c2(v'/αc)
 K = -(1/α)
				m'v'2/2
 
 To put in some hypothethical numbers:
				If vav' =.2c, then v' =.4c, and
 K = .714 x 5.55 x
				10-36kg x (1.2 x 108m/s)2/2
 =
				-2.85 x 10-20J
 
 Now let me calculate equations
				from the zero-point
 K = (1 - α)F0
 {For α we will use 1/[1 - (v/c)] instead of 1 +
				(v'/c)]}
 K = -(v/c)m0c2
 m0
				= (m - m')/2
 mr = m' - m0
 m0
				= [m - (mr + m0)]/2
 3m0 = m -
				mr
 K = -(m - mr)(v/3c)c2
 -3cK/v = mc2 - mrc2
 -K ≠
				mc2 - mrc2
 Which means that if
 ET = K + mrc2
 ET ≠ mc2
 ET = mrc2
				- (v/c)m0c2
 = mc2/β -
				(v/2c)c2 [m - (m/α)]
 = mc2/β -
				(v/2c)[mc2 - (mc2/α)]
 = mc2[(1/β)
				- (v/2c) + (v/2αc)]
 ET = mc2[1 -
				(3v/2c) - (v2/2c2)]
 = 3.70 x 10-19J
 
 Now
				let us find ET in terms of mr, so that we
				can compare the transform to gamma.
 ET =
				mrc2 - (v/c)m0c2
 mr
				= m' - m0
 m0 = mrβ/α -
				mr
 ET = mrc2 -
				{mr(v/c)c2[(β/α) - 1}
 = mrc2 - {mr(v/c)c2[v/(2c -
				3v)
 ET = mrc2{1 - [v2/(2c2
				- 3cv)]}
 K = {mrc2{1 - [v2/(2c2
				- 3cv)]} - mrc2
 I check this against my
				previous numbers and find that indeed this also is
 -2.85 x
				10-20J
 I will call this transformation term kappa2,
				κ2.
 κ2 = 1 - [v2/(2c2-
				3cv)]
 Notice that it is not the equivalent of either gamma
				or beta (although it is very close in output to gamma).
 @
				v = .286c, κ2 = {1 - [v2/(2c2 -
				3cv)]} = .929
 If we had
				been in an experimental situation where the kinetic energy had
				been positive, then we would have found the inverse of this
				number using kappa1, which is
 κ1
				= 1 + [v2/(2c2 - 3cv)]
 = 1.07
 To
				show you how close we are to current experimental values, if we
				had used the average velocity in this equation, we would have
				found
 kappa1 to be 1.01
 gamma (@
				v = .143c) = 1.01
 
 An exact match. Astonishing, considering
				all the mathematical and conceptual changes I made in Einstein's
				derivations. But he was not able to derive the classical equation
				from his thought problem, and I can:
 -3cK/v = mc2 -
				mrc2 (from above)
 mc2 - m[1 -
				(3v/2c)]c2 = -3cK/v
 multiply both sides by
				v2/c2
 mv2 - m[1 - (3v/2c)]v2
				= -3Kv/c
 (3v/2c)]mv2 = -3Kv/c
 K = - mv2/2
 = -2.85 x 10-20J
 
 Absolutely incredible! Once Einstein's variable
				assignments are corrected it turns out that the classical
				equation is precisely correct. Einstein and current wisdom both
				treat the classical equation as an approximation at slow speeds
				relative to c. As supposed proof of this, they expand the square
				root in gamma using the binomial expansion, the first
				uncancelled term being v2/2c2. But this is
				once again a fortuitous collision of luck and bad math. I have
				shown that gamma is an incorrect transformation term, so
				that expanding the square root of the term is pointless. If there
				is no gamma, there can be no expansion of the square root and no
				proof of the approximation of mv2/2. Besides, this
				expansion proposes to find that
 K ≈ mrv2/2
 Which is absurd. What
				should have been intended is to show that K ≈ mv2/2
				at slow speeds
 This
				latter equation is the classical expression of kinetic energy. As
				I have shown, expressing kinetic energy in terms of a rest mass
				isn't even sensible, once it is understood what the different
				terms mean. The relativistic equation would have to resolve to
				either mv2/2 or m'v'2/2 at slow speeds,
				even if gamma and Einstein's theory and the binomial
				expansion were all completely correct. Having it resolve to
				mrv2/2 is just further proof that no one
				knew what was going on with the math and the variable
				assignments. You cannot have a rest mass in a kinetic energy
				equation because a mass at rest has no kinetic energy. Or, to be
				more precise, you cannot express mass as rest mass in your
				central and fundamental kinetic energy equation. K = mv2/2
				is not some lead-up equation. It is the basic expression (and
				definition) of kinetic energy. It is therefore illogical to use a
				rest mass as your variable.
 
 Let me now clear up some
				rough spots. I have used Einstein's thought problem to find my
				energy equations, after a good bit of scouring. But in his
				thought problem the transform is done on the frequency of the
				light. This makes sense except for one thing: I explicitly said
				in my own thought problem that the ball does not use E' in its
				equations on the photon. How can I reconcile the two statements?
 In the momentum
				equation m'v' = E/c, I say that the ball does not use E'. And
				this is true. In this equation, the equality applies to two
				numbers that are both generated by the same field, that field
				being the field of the zero-point. m'v' is relative to the
				zero-point, therefore E/c must also be relative to the
				zero-point. E'/c is not relative to the zero-point; it is
				relative to the coordinate system of the ball.
 But in Einstein's thought problem, we are not
				creating a momentum equality, or conserving momentum. We are
				transforming from one system to another, A to B. We are
				transforming the energy of the light from E to E' at the same
				time that we are transforming masses and total energies. We must
				therefore include in the derivation E', which is the energy of
				the light measured from the ball. E' is a necessary variable in
				his problem. In my initial thought problem it is not.
 
 The
				second rough spot concerns the variable v'. In my mass transform
				equations, vav was the average velocity. But in using
				Einstein's thought problem, I show that v must be the final
				velocity of the body. Some may ask why I did not simply let v be
				the final velocity in my own thought problem. It was foresight
				that made me do it (and the Work-Energy Theorem). Remember that
				the ball, when it is calculating its own velocity, is in
				possession of only two pieces of data. It has an elapsed time and
				a distance. It also knows it started from rest. It therefore must
				assume an acceleration over one part of the distance or all of
				it. According to the Work-Energy Theorem, the ball may not assume
				that a final velocity was achieved instantaneously or over no
				distance. There is a kinetic energy because there is work (and
				vice versa) and there is work because there is time and distance
				involved. A force cannot be exerted over zero time or distance.
				Since I knew that kinetic energy would be both the end product
				and the driving "force" of my thought problem, I was
				astute enough to let v be what it must be under the situation—an
				average velocity. Of course this gives us just one more thing to
				be very careful about. Each problem has its own specific variable
				assignments, which have to be written out in full and kept track
				of. Even α does not always contain the same variables. In my
				mass transforms, the velocity variables in α are average
				velocities. In my time, distance and velocity transforms it does
				not matter, since no acceleration is involved. In the light
				frequency or light energy transforms, the velocity variables are
				commonly assumed to be final velocities.
 
 The last rough
				spot concerns the use of both v and vav in the
				derivation of the energy equations. When I am transforming the
				masses within the energy equations, I am using α with vav.
				But the final equation is expressed in terms of v. Isn't this an
				illegal mathematical substitution? No. It is perfectly legal to
				use v and vav in the same equations, as long as you
				keep track of them. As you can see, α has the same value whether
				you use v or vav, as long as you use the correct form
				of alpha each time. Therefore canceling alphas from
				one equation to the next is not a problem.
 ~~~~~~~~~~
				
				 The
				equations and terms we found above apply only to the thought
				problem with the ball. I have shown, both in this paper and in my
				paper on the time and velocity transforms, that there is no one
				problem in Special Relativity. Trajectories must always be taken
				into account. Which means that if we want to generalize the mass
				and energy transforms we must do a bit more work. We must be sure
				that what seems to be true, is true. In other words, we must run
				the equations for 1) Einstein's problem with the light planes—in
				which there is a mass change but no velocity change—and also
				for 2) A problem in which the relative velocity is toward an
				observer. Only then will we fully understand the mechanics of
				mass and energy in Relativity.
 So let us return to
				Einstein's thought problem. His problem is different than my ball
				problem in that he has both a final and an initial kinetic
				energy. My ball started at rest, so that its initial kinetic
				energy was zero. These should have been Einstein's final
				equations, according to my corrections:
 L = 2F0
 ΔK
				= L[1 - (1/α)]
 ΔK = L(v/c)
 Whereas my final equations
				for the ball were:
 ΔK = (1 - α)F0
 ΔK =
				-F1(v/c)
 So let us find the equations for
				Einstein's problem
 ΔK = 2F0(v/c)
 In his
				problem, the body measured the normal frequency for the light, so
				that F0 = m0c2
 ΔK =
				2m0c2(v/c)
 But we want kinetic energy in terms of m not m0.
 2m0
				= mv/2c      (I used my equation m0
				= mvav/c from above; but we must use the total mass of
				the light planes, which is 2m0.)
 ΔK =
				2(mv/2c)c2(v/c)
 ΔK = mv2/2
 ET
				= mrc2 + 2(v/c)m0c2
 mr
				= m' - 2m0
 2m0 = mrβ/α -
				mr
 ET = mrc2 +
				{mr(v/c)c2[(β/α) - 1}
 
 ET
				= mrc2{1 + [v2/(2c2– 3cv)]}
 K
				= {mrc2{1 + [v2/(2c2–
				3cv)]} – mrc2
 ET = mrc2
				+ 2(v/c)m0c2
 ET = (1/β)mc2
				+ (v/c)[(m/α) - m/β)]c2
 ET = mc2
				[(1/β) + (v/αc) - (v/cβ)]
 ET = mc2 [1
				– (3v/2c) + (v2/2c2)]
 
 We have
				proven that the classical equation also applies to Einstein’s
				thought problem, and that ET ≠ mc2 there
				either.
 But we are
				finally in a position to show that Einstein chose his thought
				problem carefully. He wanted avoid an acceleration and the use of
				average velocity that my problem entailed. So he chose a problem
				with no velocity change at all. Kinetic energy changes only
				because the mass has changed. But this has the effect of
				oversimplifying the problem of energy transformation due to
				Relativity. Notice that it is difficult to understand where to
				apply the Work-Energy Theorem in Einstein’s problem, since it
				is unclear where there is any force. You can’t have a force
				without an acceleration, and there is no acceleration here. What
				has happened is that the two forces from the two light planes
				have cancelled eachother out. You have forces, but they have
				added to zero. Some may say that is the beauty of the problem. It
				sidesteps all non-critical issues. But by sidestepping them it
				has cloaked them, historically. Einstein’s problem was too
				subtle by half. It was so subtle that it confused Einstein
				himself. What is more, by generalizing his findings from this one
				very unique thought problem (which was not at all general—it
				was not a standard problem of mass increase or energy
				transformation) he hid all the variations of mass and energy in
				Relativity. My thought problem is both more standard and more
				complex, so that it shows all the issues involved in solving
				problems of this nature.
 
 Now, what if we have a thought
				problem where the velocity is toward an observer? The kinetic
				energy will be positive, but the masses will show a decrease. Let
				us return to our ball and our photon. We will imagine two white
				lines drawn on the ground now, instead of one. The ball starts at
				the first white line, as before, but this time it is propelled
				toward the second white line, where we put an observer.
				Everything else is the same as in the first experiment. The
				momentum equalities will be the same, except that alpha
				for both the velocities and the masses will be inverted. Alpha
				in this problem will take the value α2 = 1 – (v’/c)
				= 1/[1 + (v/c)]
 Alpha in
				the energy transform of the photon must stay in the original
				form, however, since the ball will still be measuring a redshift.
				The observer will be measuring a normal frequency, just as in the
				first problem. We must be very careful here, since we have two
				values for alpha. Not just two equal constructions, as in
				the first problem; now we actually have different values. We will
				call the original alpha α1, and the new alpha
				α2.
 E1 = E0 - F0
 H1 = H0 - F1      
				[Some will want to add F1 to H0 here, since
				we have changed directions. But if we subtract the photon’s
				energy in one system, we must do so in the other system as well.
				The body cannot lose the mass equivalence of the photon in one
				system and gain it in the other.]
 K = H1 – E1
 F1
				= α1F0
 K = H0 - α1F0
				-(H0 - F0)
 = (1 - α1)F0
 = -(v/c)F1 = -(v/c)m0c2
 K
				= -mv2/2
 What
				happened? We still got a negative kinetic energy. Everything
				worked out just like our first problem. But we know that the body
				must have a positive kinetic energy relative to the observer,
				since it is now moving toward it (it was at rest to start, of
				course). The reason we got a negative value at the end is that
				the equations don't know the difference between one white line in
				our system and the other. The equations only know the difference
				between one system and another. This series of equations gives us
				values relative to the zero-point of the experiment, which has
				not changed. We moved our observer, but we did not change the
				point of emission. The equation does not recognize that our
				observer has moved, since we did not add any pertinent
				information to the equation. The movement of the observer took
				place only in our heads, not in our math. The point of emission
				is behind the ball, therefore the kinetic energy, as a vector, is
				still negative. In order to get the right direction, we must make
				the change by hand. Anyone who has done a lot of vector equations
				knows that this kind of thing is a common feature of directional
				problems. The equations don’t always yield the desired
				information, since it is often impossible to include the
				pertinent postulates into the math. That is why it is so critical
				to be able to visualize vector problems and other geometric
				problems. Juggling equations is not sufficient. No problem in
				history has made this clearer than Special Relativity.
 K =
				mv2/2
 ET = mrc2 + (v/c)m0c2
 mr = m’ - m0
 m0 =
				mrβ2/α2 - mr
 ET
				= mrc2 + {mr(v/c)c2[(β2/α2)
				– 1}
 β2 = 1/[1 + (v/2c)]
 ET =
				mrc2{1 + [v2/(2c2+
				cv)]}
 K = {mrc2{1 + [v2/(2c2+
				cv)]} – mrc2
 ET = mrc2
				+ (v/c)m0c2
 ET = (1/β2)mc2
				+ (v/c)[(m/α2) - m/β2)]c2
 ET
				= mc2[1 + (v/2c) + (v2/2c2)]
 ~~~~~~~~~~
				
				 We
				have now found three different transforms for three different
				problems. The only thing that has remained constant is that K =
				±mv2/2 which
				can be considered ironic in that this was the one equation that
				was thought to be an approximation; also the one equation that
				was thought to have been superceded. One very important thing is
				different from classical theory, though, and that is that I have
				shown that v has a limit at .5c. Using gamma, physicists
				now think that v (the velocity as measured from a distance) can
				approach very close to c—since this is the value for v that
				gamma gives them. I have shown that v’—which is the
				true velocity of the body—may approach c; but v may not. This
				is not a great difference in theory—in that currently the
				variable v is thought to be the real velocity of the object. But
				it does take some getting used to, experimentally. An
				experimental physicist must now use either one of the equations
 K = mv2/2      or
 K =
				{mrc2{1 + [v2/(2c2–
				3cv)]} – mrc2
 since in an experimental situation he or she will
				always be dealing with mass as measured from a distance. That is
				to say, m’ is the mass as measured by the proton or electron
				itself, for instance, so it will not be part of our data.
				Therefore v’ cannot be calculated directly, by using one of the
				primed equations. The scientist will first discover v and then
				calculate v’ from that.
 
 
 
 Part
				EightThe Accelerator Problem
 (Why 108?)
 The
				one variation of this problem we have not solved is the one that
				will prove this theory of mine beyond any doubt. That variation
				is the real problem of subatomic particles that achieve high
				velocities in accelerators. Notice that this problem is not like
				any of those we have solved. We have found transforms when 1) a
				body with an initial velocity emits a smaller body, but does not
				change velocity, 2) a body initially at rest emits a smaller body
				and moves away from an observer, and 3) a body initially at rest
				emits a smaller body and moves toward an observer. We now seek
				the situation when 4) a body with an initial velocity is
				bombarded by smaller bodies and achieves a final velocity. This
				case is obviously closer to Einstein’s slowly accelerated
				electron, except that in this case the subatomic particles are
				not slowly accelerated. 
 Thought
				Experiment 4: Let
				us reverse the situation of our 3rd thought experiment—where a
				body at rest emitted a photon—and ask what would happen if the
				body instead absorbed a photon. Let us call our body a proton, so
				that we can assign it a known rest mass (mr
				=1.67 x 10-27kg).
				Now, we discovered an equation for mass increase with the
				emission problem, but this equation implies that we cannot
				increase the mass by more than 4 times, even if we take the
				proton all the way to c. m = mr/[1
				- (3v/2c)]
 Remember that
				v cannot exceed c/2. In my math it is the variable v’ that has
				a limit at c. However, we know from experiments in particle
				accelerators that the mass of the proton hits a limit at 108mr.
				We imagine this means that the proton in the accelerator is
				accelerating by absorbing energy from the acceleration field. To
				see what I mean by this, notice that both my emission problem and
				Einstein’s various thought problems all imply that when a body
				emits a photon, it not only gains an acceleration from the
				emission, it also loses mass or mass equivalence by losing the
				“body” of the photon. In other words, the photon leaves a
				hole. The rest mass of the body decreases after the emission.
				That is what Einstein’s variable assignments tell us (E1
				= E0
				- F0).
				This would be expected, since a body can hardly emit a smaller
				body, no matter whether that body is a particle of light or not,
				and expect to keep the same amount of rest energy.
 This means that if we reverse the process, the body must gain an
				acceleration and gain rest mass from the absorbed photon. It
				gains a sort of double energy increase. Let us use our math from
				previous papers to express this.
 In a real accelerator, the proton is taken to speed in a series
				of accelerations. This is an experimental concern, however, not a
				mathematical concern. Scientists do not use one super-field to
				accelerate since they 1) cannot create it, 2) cannot keep it from
				destroying the proton if they did create it. But we can simplify
				the math by allowing ourselves to imagine a super-high frequency
				photon with which we will bombard our proton in a single go. The
				proton will absorb this giant photon and we will see if the math
				we achieve from this absorption can explain the number 108. If it
				can, then we will have taken a decisive step in proving these
				corrections to Special Relativity. No one has yet been able to
				derive this number, and there is currently no theory to explain
				why there is a limit. The accepted term gamma
				implies an infinite
				mass increase capability; nor has the math of quantum theory
				predicted the existence of a limit or the number 108.
 
 First
				we must differentiate between our different masses and
				mass-equivalences.
 m0
				= mass equivalence of
				the photon
 mri
				= rest mass of proton
				before absorption = 1.67 x 10-27kg
 mrf
				= rest mass of proton
				after absorption, measured from B
 m = moving mass of proton,
				measured by an observer
 m’ = moving mass of proton, measured
				by the proton, relative to the observer
 
 By the
				conservation of momentum, the momentum of the proton+photon after
				the absorption must equal the momentum of the photon before.
 mv/2 = E/c [remember that we must use the average velocity]
 E
				= m0c2
 m
				= 2m0c/v
 m0
				= mv/2c
 1/α =1 –
				(v/c)
 v/c = 1 – (1/α)
 mv/c = m – m’
 m0
				= (m – m’) /2
 mrf
				= mri
				+ m0
 m’
				= mri
				+ 2m0
 m’
				= mrf
				- m0
				+ 2m0
				= mrf
				+ m0
 m/α
				= mrf
				+ m0
				= mrf
				+ mv/2c mrf
				= m[1 –
				(3v/2c)]
 Still the term
				beta.
				But let us find m in terms of mri
				and mri
				in terms of m0.
 m/α
				= mri
				+ mv/c
 mri
				= m[1 – (2v/c)]
 m0
				= mv/2c
 mri
				= 2m0[(c/v)
				– 2]
 
 So we only need to return to Einstein’s equations
				to make the proper corrections.
 E0
				= the initial energy of
				the proton before absorption of the photon (A as background).
 E1
				= the total energy of
				the proton after the absorption of the photon (A)
 H0
				= the initial total
				energy of the proton as seen from the zero-point (B)
 H1
				= the final total
				energy of the proton as seen from the zero-point (B)
 F0
				= the energy of the
				photon in A
 F1
				= the energy of the
				photon in B
 F1
				= F0α
				since F1
				> F0
 E1
				= E0
				+ F0
 H1
				= H0
				+ F1
 E0
				= H0
				since the proton is
				initially at rest in both systems, A and B
 H1
				– H0
				= F1
				= αF0
 And
				the final kinetic energy is represented by
 K = H1
				– E1
 =
				H1
				– (E0
				+ F0)
				= H1
				– (H0
				+ F0)
				= αF0
				- F0
				= (α - 1)F0
				= (v/c)F1
 K
				= (v/c)m0c2
 m0
				= (m – m’)/2
 mri
				= m’ - 2m0
 m0
				= [m – (mri
				+ 2m0)]/2
 4m0
				= m – mri
 K
				= (m – mri)(v/4c)c2
 4cK/v
				= mc2
				– mric2
 K ≠ mc2
				– mriic2
 4cK/v = mc2
				– mric2
 mc2
				– m[1 – (2v/c)]c2
				= 4cK/v
 multiply
				both sides by v2/c2
 mv2
				– m[1 – (2v/c)]v2
				= 4Kv/c
 (2v/c)]mv2
				= 4Kv/c
 K = mv2/2
				Which means that if
 ET
				= K + mrfc2
 mrf
				= mri
				+ m0
 ET
				= K + mric2
				+ m0c2
 ET
				= mric2[1
				+ (v’/2c)]
 [1 – (v’2/c2)]
 ET
				= mric2{1
				+ [(v2
				+ cv)/(2c2–
				4cv)]}
 ET
				= mc2
				[1 – (3v/2c) +
				(v2/2c2)]
 ET
				= mc2
				[1 +
				(v’/2c)]
 [1 + (2v’/c) + (v’2/c2)]
 Notice
				the last bolded equation above tells us why gamma
				works so well in
				accelerators despite being slightly incorrect and being derived
				with so many mistakes.
 
 In accelerators we are finding a
				limit at 108. Therefore, we set my equation equal to 108 and see
				what velocity the proton is really achieving.
 (v/c)m0c2
				+ m0c2
				+ mric2
				= 108mric2
 (v/c)m0c2
				+ m0c2
				= 107mric2
 This last step was allowed since mri
				is the same in both
				theories.
 [(v/c) + 1]m0
				= 107mri
 mri
				= 2m0[(c/v)
				– 2]
 [(v/c) + 1]/[(c/v) - 2] = 214
 v = .4982558c
 v’
				= .9930474c = 2.97708 x 108m/s
 
 c
				= 2.99792458 x 108m/s
 According
				to current theory, gamma
				is equal to 108 at v =
				.999957c. The v variable in gamma
				is equivalent to my v’,
				since current theory has no v’, and since I have defined my v’
				as the true velocity of the object.
 
 So, we now have all
				our numbers in hand. How am I going to explain the number 108?
				Notice that we have an unexplained velocity differential in both
				current theory and my theory. By current theory the limit in
				velocity for the proton is 1.2 x 104m/s
				less than c. By my theory the gap is a bit larger: 2.1 x 106m/s.
				What causes this gap? And which gap is correct? If I can answer
				these questions, then I can show where the number 108 comes
				from.
 Let’s say that
				the proton already has a velocity or velocity equivalent due to
				some motion or force or other unexplained phenomenon. Let’s say
				that the proton’s total velocity cannot exceed c, and that this
				other unexplained motion or force makes up the difference. That
				is precisely what I have done in my
				paper on the Universal Gravitational Constant. Using a hint
				of Maxwell and the dimensions of G, I showed that the proton can
				be shown to have a constant acceleration in any direction of 8.88
				x 10-12m/s2.   
				Here is a gloss of that math.  Given two equal spheres of
				radius r touching at a point, we have
 F = Gmm/(2r)2
 ma
				= 2Gmm/(2r)2
 a = 2Gm/4r2
 a/2 =
				2Δr/2Δt2
 We now let the spheres expand at a constant and equal rate. 
				We assign Δr to a change in the radius instead of a change in
				the distance between the spheres, and this allows us to calculate
				even when the spheres are touching.
 Δr/Δt2
				= Gm/r2
 After time Δt, the radius will be r + Δr.  After any
				appreciable amount of time, r will be negligible in relation to
				Δr, so that Δr ≈ r + Δr
 m = Δr3/GΔt2
 a
				= 2Δr/Δt2
 a
				= 2mG/Δr2
 That
				is the acceleration of each of two equal masses in a
				gravitational situation. But if we want to give all the
				acceleration to one of them, holding the other one steady for
				experimental purposes, then we simply double the value.
 a =
				4mG/Δr2
 If the proton has a radius of 10-13m,
				this yields
 a = 8.88 x 10-12m/s2
 If we allow the proton to accelerate at this pace over its entire
				lifetime up until the current moment, then we can achieve a
				number for its present velocity due to mass.  My velocity is
				a much better fit.
 Using this acceleration due to mass and gamma,
				we get an age of the proton of only 85 million years.
 v = at/2
 = 2
				x 1.2 x 104m/s       
				=    85
				million years
 8.88 x 10-12m/s2
 My corrected numbers give an age of the proton of about 15
				billion years.
 v = at/2 = (8.88 x 10-12m/s2
				)(4.73 x 1017s)/2
				= 2.1 x 106m/s
 My number is therefore a match to current estimates, as you see.
				Current theory based on gamma
				is clearly wrong, since
				the proton cannot be as young as 85 million years.  That
				would make protons 50x younger than the earth.
 
 [To see a
				shorter way to derive the number 108, you may now visit my more
				recent paper called Redefining
				the Photon. There, I use the density of the charge field to
				calculate the number.]
 
 In conclusion, my mathematical
				connection of this paper with my other papers therefore does
				several very important things.
 1) I have explained the velocity limit of the proton in the
				accelerator. It cannot achieve c due to its mass. This was
				assumed by all. But I have shown precisely how and why the mass
				limits the velocity.
 2)
				The mass has a calculable velocity equivalent and I have provided
				the math to achieve this velocity. In doing so I have dismissed
				the mass dimension altogether, showing that mass can and must be
				expressed with the dimensions of length and time. I have given
				the dimensions of G to the mass, so that G is now just a number.
				This means that the kilogram must be redefined in terms of the
				meter and the second.
 3)
				I have provided further mathematical proof of my corrections to
				Special Relativity. I have shown one more instance in which gamma
				fails to give us
				correct numbers. Findings in particle accelerators could not be
				tied to other theory for two reasons: we didn’t have the
				correct theory to tie it to, and we didn’t have the correct
				velocity of the particle. My corrections from both ends allow us
				to tie up in the middle in a very satisfying way.
 4) The explaining of mass as motion is a huge step in the quest
				for a unification theory. One important implication of my new
				theory is that gravity doesn’t even exist at the atomic level.
				We don’t have to call the motion I have given to mass gravity.
				We can continue to call it gravity at the macrolevel if we like,
				but we can let the motion explain one of the other “forces”
				at the atomic level. Gravity is not a force at all. According to
				the new theory, you can assign mass, gravity and inertia to the
				same basic motion. Mass, gravity and inertia are not three
				different things, they are three different expressions of the
				same thing. And all three resolve to length over time.
 
 
 
 
 
				*I
				have been asked where the 2 comes from when I write 2v'av/c
				in the denominator of my velocity transform above. In answer,
				consider that the fraction v/c is the real transform here, so we
				have to be careful to get it right.  We are comparing v to
				c.  So we can't compare v'av
				to c.  If we did that,
				we would be implying that the object accelerated to speed over
				some interval while the light did not.  But since we assume
				light is material just like our object, we cannot imply that.
				 The light may accelerate to speed extremely fast, but it
				still must accelerate.  Since our given number for c is
				obviously a final velocity, we must also use a final velocity for
				our object.   You
				will say that we have no indication light accelerates to speed
				when emitted, but that empirical fact is beside the point in this
				particular thought problem.  Since we are ultimately
				calculating momenta and energies from this thought problem,
				we have to
				let the photon accelerate at emission, otherwise it wouldn't be
				capable of creating a force back on the object.  If we let
				light be emitted with no acceleration, it couldn't create an
				equal and opposite force back on the object, you see.  It
				would just slip out of the object with a whisper, and no force
				back would be created.  So to compare v to c and obtain any
				sort of momentum—using the conservation of momentum—we have to
				assume light accelerates at emission.  If we assume that,
				then we have to use a v final in that position to make the
				equations work.   
 
 
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