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Tags: Physics, Lang:en
Summary
Unified field theory (UFT) is a single theoretical framework
that explains all fields and their forces. The goal of UFT is
to identify the common factor that makes all fields. UFT has
achieved this goal. The common factor that makes all fields is
one type of quantum string. Each string has six properties.
Four properties can change: momentum, compression, alignment,
and frequency. Two properties cannot change: charge and volume.
Based on these six properties, UFT explains how these strings
create five fields and 13 fundamental forces. At this quantum
level, there are 13 distinct forces not just four. UFT is a
quantum theory that includes gravity, inertia, matter, light,
time, relativity, black holes, dark matter, and dark energy. It
presents new paradigms in understanding properties of light and
space. It connects strings to the following topics of physics:
field theory, quantum physics, gravitation, elementary particle
physics, magnetics, theoretical nuclear physics, and optical
physics. It provides theoretical applications for more
efficient electrical induction and creation of energy. UFT is a
conceptual theory. It is not a mathematical theory. However, it
has equations that define basic relationships among string
properties. It provides an orderly presentation of the model.
UFT presents 74 new properties and principles. It provides a
better understanding of our world. It makes new specific
predictions. It defines related experiments for
experimentalists to verify or disprove these predictions. For
example, UFT predicts that light has mass and a positive
charge. This is a candid presentation noting 14 possible
caveats that require further study. It defines new areas of
study for physicists, mathematicians, electrical engineers,
cosmologists, and other scientific disciplines. **