----- Mensaje original -----
De: Robert Ulanowicz <u...@umces.edu>
Fecha: Sábado, 29 de Diciembre de 2012, 4:26 pm
> **************************************************************************
> 
> Stan,
> 
> We know that the Fine-Structure Constant, alpha, has changed 
> over the
> course of the universe
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fine-structure_constant>. I 
> wrote in my
> last book how I suspect others have "evolved" as well.
> 
> What is needed is a good dimensional analysis. Unfortunately,
> dimensional analysis seems foreign to physicists. Otherwise, they
> wouldn't be making some of the incredible claims that are 
> abroad! :)
> 
> Cheers,
> Bob
> 
> Quoting Stanley N Salthe <ssal...@binghamton.edu>:
> 
> > Gordana has said:
> >
> >
> > Information and Energy/Matter
> >
> >   What can we hope for from studies of information 
> related to energy/matter
> > (as it appears for us in space/time)? Information is a concept 
> known for
> > its ambiguity in both common, everyday use and in its specific 
> technical> applications throughout different fields of research 
> and technology.
> > However, most people are unaware that matter/energy today is 
> also a concept
> > surrounded by a disquieting uncertainty. What for Democritus 
> were building
> > blocks of the whole universe appear today to constitute only 
> 4% of its
> > observed content. (NASA 2012) [1] The rest is labeled "dark matter"
> > (conjectured to explain gravitational effects otherwise 
> unaccounted for)
> > and "dark energy" (introduced to account for the expansion of the
> > universe). We do not know what "dark matter" and "dark energy" 
> actually> are. This indicates that our present understanding of 
> the structure of the
> > physical world needs re-examination. [...]
> >
> >
> > Information and Energy/Matter
> > Gordana Dodig Crnkovic
> >
> > Information 2012, 3(4), 751-755;
> > http://unam.us4.list-
> manage2.com/track/click?u=0eb0ac9b4e8565f2967a8304b&id=ae24f18d1e&e=d38efa683e>
> >
> > Special Issue "Information and Energy/Matter"
> >
> > http://unam.us4.list-
> manage.com/track/click?u=0eb0ac9b4e8565f2967a8304b&id=ea193b9747&e=d38efa683e>
> > See it on Scoop.it (
> > http://unam.us4.list-
> manage.com/track/click?u=0eb0ac9b4e8565f2967a8304b&id=cdfa764e97&e=d38efa683e)>
>  , via Papers (
> > http://unam.us4.list-
> manage.com/track/click?u=0eb0ac9b4e8565f2967a8304b&id=e23b9e2cd9&e=d38efa683e>
>  )
> >
> >
> > I would like to inquire whether any fis'rs might react to the 
> following> notion:
> >
> > Dark matter is postulated because the amount of matter 
> detectable in
> > galaxies would be insufficient alone to explain how they hold 
> together> given the value of the gravitational constant.
> >
> > However, the information we glean from galaxies represents 
> their condition
> > as it was a very long time ago, in an earlier universe.
> >
> > Is it not possible to resolve this puzzle less radically than 
> by inventing
> > dark matter by supposing that the gravitational constant has 
> not been
> > constant but has instead been changing, and was much stronger 
> in the past,
> > which is when we detect these distant clusters of 
> matter?  Perhaps G as
> > been scaled to the rate of expansion of space?  Perhaps 
> the rate of
> > expansion was greater then than now, even with current acceleration?
> >
> > STAN
>
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