Pharis E. Williams
Energetic Materials Research and Testing Center (EMRTC), Socorro, NM 87801, USA.
Tel: (505) 835-5774/5301;
E-mail: [email protected]
Received: 24 February 2001 / Accepted: 19 June 2001 / Published: 22 August June 2001
Abstract:
It is shown that the classical laws of thermodynamics require
that mechanical systems must exhibit energy that becomes unavailable
to do useful work. In thermodynamics, this type of energy is called
entropy. It is further shown that these laws require two metrical
manifolds, equations of motion, field equations, and Weyl's quantum principles.
Weyl's quantum principle requires quantization of the electrostatic potential
of a particle and that this potential be non-singular. The interactions
of particles through these non-singular electrostatic potentials are analyzed
in the low velocity limit and in the relativistic limit. It is shown
that writing the two particle interactions for unlike particles allows
an examination in two limiting cases: large and small separations.
These limits are shown to have the limiting motions of: all motions are
ABOUT the center of mass or all motion is OF the center of
mass. The first limit leads to the standard Dirac equation.
The second limit is shown to have equations of which the electroweak theory
is a subset.
An extension of the gauge principle into a five-dimensional manifold,
then restricting the generality of the five-dimensional manifold by using
the conservation principle, shows that the four-dimensional hypersurface
that is embedded within the 5-D manifold is required to obey Einstein's
field equations. The 5-D gravitational quantum equations of the solar system
are presented.
Keywords: mechanical entropy; entropy manifold; geometry quantum echanics; quantum gravity; SU(2); SU(3).