920.00
Functions of A and B Modules
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921.00
Energy Deployment in A and B Quanta Modules
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921.01
By virtue of their properties as described in Secs.
920,
921.20
, and
921.30
,
the centers of energy in the A and B Quanta Modules
can be locally reoriented within the
same space without disturbing contiguously surrounding
configurations of closest-packed
geometry; these local reorientations can either concentrate
and hold or deploy and
distribute the energies of the respective A and B Quanta
Modules, in the first case
concentrating the centers of energy inwardly, and in
the second case deploying the centers
of energy outwardly.
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921.04
The exact energy-volume relationship of the A and
B Quanta Modules and
their probable volumetric equivalence with the only
meager dimensional transformations of
the 120 LCD tetrahedral voids of the icosahedron (see
Sec.
905.60) may prove to have
important physical behavior kinships.
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921.10
Energy Behavior in Tetrahedra: A tetrahedron that
can be folded out of a
single foldable triangle has the strange property of
holding energy in varying degrees.
Energy will bounce around inside the tetrahedron's four
internal triangles as we described
its bouncing within one triangle (see Sec.
901). Many
bounce patterns are cyclically
accomplished without tendency to bounce out of tetrahedrons,
whether regular or
irregular, symmetrical or asymmetrical.
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921.12
The irregular, asymmetrical, tetrahedral A Quanta
Module's four triangular
facets unfold spirally into one asymmetrical triangle.
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921.13
But the triangular facets of the B Quanta Module unfold
inherently into four
mutually dissimilar but interhinged 90-degree triangles.
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921.30
Energy Characteristics of B Quanta Module: The B Quanta
Modules can
vertex-combinedly hold energy but tend to release it.
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921.32
The B Quanta Modules do not retain energy, and they
cannot combine with
one another to form a single tetrahedron with energy-introverting
and -conserving
proclivities.
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921.40
Summary: Though of equal energy potential or latent
content, the As and
the Bs are two different systems of unique energy-behavior
containment. One is
circumferentially embracing, energy-impounding, integratively
finite, and nucleation-
conserving. The other is definitively disintegrative
and nuclearly exportive. A is outside-
inwardly introvertive. B is outside-outwardly extrovertive.
(See Illus.
924.20.)
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922.00
Conceptual Description and Contrast
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922.01
The A Quanta Module is all of the nonconsidered, nonconceptual,
finite,
equilibrious, not-now-tuned-in Universe.
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923.00
Constant Volume
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![]() Fig. 923.10
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923.10
Precession of Two Module Edges: There are six edges
of a tetrahedron,
and each edge precesses the opposite edge toward a 90-degrees-maximum
of attitudinal
difference of orientation. Any two discrete, opposite
edges can be represented by two
aluminum tubes, X and Y (see Illus.
923.10D), which
can move longitudinally anywhere
along their respective axes while the volume of the
irregular tetrahedra remains constant.
They may shuttle along on these lines and produce all
kinds of asymmetrical tetrahedra,
whose volumes will always remain unit by virtue of their
developed tetrahedra's constant
base areas and identical altitudes. The two tubes' four
ends produce the other four
interconnecting edges of the tetrahedron, which vary
as required without altering the
constantly uniform volume.
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923.15
One Tetra Edge Constant: Using a constant-volume,
vectorially edged
tetrahedron ABCD with six edges AB, AC, AD, BC, BD,
and CD, and with only one of
those six edge lengths holding a constant length AB,
all five of the tetrahedron's other
edge lengths may covary as the tetrahedron rotates around
the fixed edge length AB,
which acts as an axis of rotation. While the axis AB
is precessionally tilted within its
celestial theater, it is experientially demonstrable
that__without changing the tetrahedron's
volume or its constant-length vector AB__its two other
corners C and D may interconnect
the AB-fixed-length-axis points with any other two points
in Universe no matter how
remote from one another. This is the reason why electromagnetic
waves can interlink any
points in Universe in response to a given constant wavelength
AB. (Compare Secs.
426.40,
530.11
,
960.08
, and
961.10-40.)
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923.20
Constant Volume: A comparison of the end views of
the A and B Quanta
Modules shows that they have equal volumes as a result
of their equal base areas and
identical altitudes. (See Sec.
621.)
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923.21
A line can be projected from its origin at the center
of area of the triangular
base of a regular tetrahedron, outward through the opposite
apex of the tetrahedron to
any desired distance. When subdivided into increments
equal to the distance between its
triangular-base center and its apex, and when each of
these equilinear increments outward
beyond the apex is interconnected by three lines leading
to each of the three comers of the
base triangle, then each of the successive volumetric
additions will be of identical volume
to that of the original tetrahedra, and the overall
form will be that of a tetrahedron which
become progressively longer and sharp-pointed with each
addition. (See Illus.
923.10 A,
B, and C.) As the ever-sharpening and elongating tetrahedron
approaches infinity, the
three elongating edges tend to parallelism; i.e., toward
what is known as parallax in
astronomy. The modules will tend to congruence with
the parallaxing lines. Each full-line-
long length model of these congruent lines will have
the same volume as the original
module.
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923.31
We will inherently superimpose progressive base-to-apex
attenuating
sections. In the electric conductor wire, this means
that whatever energy increment is fed
into the first base module will tend to be conducted
at various unit frequencies along the
line. Each unique frequency introduced at the base will
create its unique conic altitude
incrementation. The outermost, line-long cone's energy
quantum will always be the same
as that of the initial base cone. Finally, the last
and outermost cone is just as long as the
wire itself-so there is an outside charge on the wire
tending to fluoresce a precessional
broadcasting of the initial inputs at 90 degrees; i.e.,
perpendicularly away from the wire.
This may elucidate antenna behaviors as well as long-distance,
high-voltage, electric
energy conductions which tend to broadcast their conducted
energy. (For further
elaboration of the constant-volume, tetrahedral models,
see Secs.
961.10,
961.20,
961.30
and
961.40.)
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924.00
Congruence of Centers
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924.11
But the A (+) and A (-), and B (+) and B (-) respective
volumetric centers
are never congruent. However, the positive or the negative
AAB aggregates (these are the
"Mites." See Sec.
953.10) have identical volumetric
centers.
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![]() Table 924.20 |
924.20
Table of Tetrahedral Functions of A and B Quanta Modules
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| Next Section: 930.00 |