One-universe Deterministic Quantum Model Proposed

Negative-time information quanta, "backyons," provide the hidden variable necessary to establish a deterministic model of quantum physics. Backyons provide information about the future to systems, thereby determining which of multiple possible outcomes must arise.

(PRWEB) February 25, 2006 -- Scientist Ron DeHaas has developed a theory that answers many of the puzzling questions about the universe. The most fascinating aspect of the new theory is that it suggests that causality actually moves backwards through time; that is, cause follows effect, rather than vice versa.

Negative-time information quanta, herein referred to as "backyons" provide the hidden variable necessary to establish a deterministic model of quantum physics. Backyons provide information about the future to systems, thereby determining which of multiple possible outcomes must arise. One single universe (the "ultimate observer") outcome is demanded by this model; that universe may be open, flat, or closed. As a result of determinism provided by this model, scientific laws work.

A t- information quantity (particle? string?), herein referred to as the "backyon," brings Einstein (a la EPR) and Copenhagen together, and untangles entanglement. It eliminates the need for many universes, and in fact demands only one.

Take, for a quantum-level example, the "entanglement" of two entangled photons. As they move apart, backyons flow back to their origin so that, at the time of entanglement the photons are already provided with the information on what they will become. The first photon to be observed will provide all the information necessary, by way of its backyons, for the other photon to "know" what it must become, even as the photons initially split apart.

Moving into a cosmological scale, the one single end result of our solitary universe (the "ultimate observer") is right now, and since the Big Bang has been, sending backyons to determine, quite deterministically, every reaction of every particle and string, every quantum decision. All of quantum uncertainty, every probability amplitude is already determined by backyons sent from that one end-resulting universe out there, but from our end of time, we see only the multitude of "could-be's" and the probability of "ought-to-be's" without being able to see the single "must-be."

The fact that scientific laws seem to work, the fact that a chair exists, points to a final end (though that final end may in itself be eternal and infinite) -- it is because of the pointer that scientific laws work, that things exist, that there is "reality." It must be so.

While we comfort ourselves in our predestinarianism, we are able to predict. Perhaps we can hope to determine whether the end-resulting universe will be/already is open, flat, or closed.

There is something to be said here for consciousness and the mind. The existence of backyons would lend itself to the suggestion, perhaps even the prediction, of certain "paranormal" experiences like deja vu, short-term prediction of the future, and other phenomena.

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Contact Information
Ronald Dehaas
http://rjdehaas.com/time/
989-720-6019

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