EMMC2


Book Description




Trends in Nanoscale Mechanics


Book Description

An outstanding feature of this book is a collection of state-of-the-art reviews written by leading researchers in the nanomechanics of carbon nanotubes, nanocrystalline materials, biomechanics and polymer nanocomposites. The structure and properties of carbon nanotubes, polycrystalline metals, and coatings are discussed in great details. The book is an exceptional resource on multi-scale modelling of metals, nanocomposites, MEMS materials and biomedical applications. An extensive bibliography concerning all these topics is included. Highlights on bio-materials, MEMS, and the latest multi-scale methods (e.g., molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo) are presented. Numerous illustrations of inter-atomic potentials, nanotube deformation and fracture, grain rotation and growth in solids, ceramic coating structures, blood flows and cell adhesion are discussed. This book provides a comprehensive review of latest developments in the analysis of mechanical phenomena in nanotechnology and bio-nanotechnology.













John Twachtman


Book Description




A New Perspective on Relativity


Book Description

Starting off from noneuclidean geometries, apart from the method of Einstein's equations, this book derives and describes the phenomena of gravitation and diffraction. A historical account is presented, exposing the missing link in Einstein's construction of the theory of general relativity: the uniformly rotating disc, together with his failure to realize, that the Beltrami metric of hyperbolic geometry with constant curvature describes exactly the uniform acceleration observed. This book also explores these questions: * How does time bend? * Why should gravity propagate at the speed of light? * How does the expansion function of the universe relate to the absolute constant of the noneuclidean geometries? * Why was the Sagnac effect ignored? * Can Maxwell's equations accommodate mass? * Is there an inertia due solely to polarization? * Can objects expand in elliptic geometry like they contract in hyperbolic geometry?




SUSYA – a SUSY alternative based on a newly proposed electro-gravitational seesaw mechanism applicable to all elementary particles


Book Description

This work proposes a Supersymmetry alternative (SUSYA) based on a newly proposed electro-gravitational seesaw mechanism applicable to all elementary particles (predicted to be actually quantum black holes) and predicting a new type of aether theory: SUSYA offers a profound bijective connection between bosons and fermions and predicts the existence of two additional right-handed Majorana massless neutrinos (moving at the speed of light) that can be two plausible candidates for the so-called hot dark matter or even for a dynamic inflationary superfluid aether/fermionic condensate.