Wednesday, June 7, 2017

General Directoral-Based Drive Of Scattering Photons

When a photon acts, in so as to scatter upon any one discrete quanta of energy -- the photon may, depending upon the specific circumstances, strike the externalized core-field-density of the light-cone-gauge of the discrete quanta that it is to strike, at basically any angle that is here to take into consideration the Ward-Caucy condition, that a photon always tends to move in the direction of the holomorphic Lagrangian-based path of the annulus of the core-field-density of its composite derived superstring of discrete energy permittivity. Such a photon, that is to act in so as to strike another discrete quanta of energy over time -- is to always tend to scatter upon the externalized core-field-density of the light-cone-gauge eigenstate of the quanta of energy that it is here to strike.  This then works to mean, that, when a photon is to strike another discrete quanta of energy, in so as to scatter upon it -- the counter string of discrete energy permittivity of the incoming photon, is to be made Yukawa in a Gliosis-based manner at the Poincare level, to the externalized core-field-density of the eminent wave-based nature of the discrete quanta of energy impedance of whatever discrete quanta of energy that it is to scatter upon. Furthermore, if one photon is to "strike" another photon -- to where the correlative composite light-cone-gauge eigenstate of one discrete electromagnetic energy is to be made eminently Yukawa to the correlative composite light-cone-gauge eigenstate of another photon over time, then -- instead of the two photons to here be scattered upon each other, the two photons will become quantized into a common beam of light.  Again -- the photon is both itself and the beam of electromagnetic energy at the same time, -- just as the reverse-fractal tense of a drop of water in the ocean is to be both itself and the ocean at the same time.
I will continue with the suspense later!  To Be Continued!  Sincerely, Samuel David Roach.

No comments: