Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Part Three of the Last Test Questions for Course 17 -- the Ricci Scalar

10)  Light has three Real Reimmanian-based spatial dimensions.  This is due to the Ward-Caucy conditions that exist above the atomic level -- these of which utilize only three spatial dimensions plus time.   (Yet, since the nucleus of an atom has an f-field (4 spatial dimensions plus time), in a way, photons exist in four Real Reimmanian spatial dimensions plus time.)

11)  Light works to bear a minimum of ten spatial dimensions plus time.  This so-eluded-to spatial dimensionality bears four stretched-out spatial dimensions plus six curled-up spatial dimensions.  So, at the sub-atomic level, light bears four Real spatial dimensions Plus six Njenhuis curled-up spatial dimensions plus time.  This is equivalent to the summation of the number of spatial dimensions of an f-field plus the number of spatial dimensions of a d-field.

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