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963.00
First Power: One Dimension
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963.01
In conventional XYZ coordination, one-dimensionality
is identified
geometrically with linear pointal frequency. The linear
measure is the first power, or the
edge of the square face of a cube.
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963.02
In synergetics, the first-power linear measure is
the radius of the sphere.
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![]() Table 963.10 |
963.10
Synergetics Constant: The synergetics constant was
evolved to convert
third-power, volumetric evaluation from a cubical to
a tetrahedral base and to employ the
ABCD-four-dimensional system's vector as the linear
computational input. In the case of
the cube this is the diagonal of the cube's square face.
Other power values are shown in
Table
963.10.
We have to find the total vector powers
involved in the calculation. In
synergetics we are always dealing in energy content:
when vector edges double together in
quadrivalence or octavalence, the energy content doubles
and fourfolds, respectively.
When the vector edges are half-doubled together, as
in the icosahedron phase of the
jitterbug__halfway between the vector equilibrium 20
and the octahedron
compression__to fourfold and fivefold contraction with
the vectors only doubled, we can
understand that the volume of energy in the icosahedron
(which is probably the same 20 as
that of the vector equilibrium) is just compressed.
(See Secs.
982.45
and
982.54.)
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964.00
Second Power: Two Dimensions
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964.01
In conventional XYZ coordination, two-dimensionality
is identified with areal
pointal frequency.
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964.02
In synergetics, second powering = point aggregate
quanta = area. In
synergetics, second powering represents the rate of
system surface growth.
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964.10
Spherical Growth Rate: In a radiational or gravitational
wave system,
second powering is identified with the point population
of the concentrically embracing
arrays of any given radius, stated in terms of frequency
of modular subdivisions of either
the radial or chordal circumference of the system. (From
Synergetics Corollary, see Sec.
240.44.)
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965.00
Third Power: Three Dimensions
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965.04
Perpendicularity (90-degreeness) uniquely characterizes
the limit of three-
dimensionality. Equiangularity (60-degreeness) uniquely
characterizes the limits of four-
dimensional systems.
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966.00
Fourth Power: Four Dimensions
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966.01
In a radiational or gravitational wave system, fourth
powering is identified
with the interpointal domain volumes.
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966.04
The vector-equilibrium model displays four-dimensional
hexagonal central
cross section.
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![]() Fig. 966.05 |
966.05
Arithmetical fourth-power energy evolution order has
been manifest time
and again in experimental physics, but could not be
modelably accommodated by the XYZ-
c.gt.s. system. That the fourth dimension can be modelably
accommodated by synergetics
is the result of complex local intertransformabilities
because the vector equilibrium has, at
initial frequency zero, an inherent volume of 20. Only
eight cubes can be closest packed in
omnidirectional embracement of any one point in the
XYZ system: in the third powering of
two, which is eight, all point-surrounding space has
been occupied. In synergetics, third
powering is allspace-fillingly accounted in tetrahedral
volume increments; 20 unit volume
tetrahedra close-pack around one point, which point
surrounding reoccurs isotropically in
the centers of the vector equilibria. When the volume
around one is 20, the frequency of
the system is at one. When the XYZ system modular frequency
is at one, the cube volume
is one, while in the vector-equilibrium synergetic system,
the initial volume is 20. When
the frequency of modular subdivision of XYZ cubes reads
two, the volume is eight. When
the vector equilibria's module reads two, the volume
is 20F3 = 20 × 8 = 160 tetrahedral
volumes__160 = 25 × 5__thus demonstrating the use of conceptual
models for fourth- and
fifth-powering volumetric growth rates. With the initial
frequency of one and the volume
of the vector equilibrium at 20, it also has 24 × 20
A and B Quanta Modules; ergo is
inherently initially 480 quanta modules. 480 = 25 ×
5 × 3. With frequency of two the
vector equilibrium is 160 × 24 = 3840 quanta modules.
3840 = 28 × 3 × 5. (See Illus.
966.05.)
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966.07
In an omnimotional Universe, it is possible to join
or lock together two
previously independently moving parts of the system
without immobilizing the remainder
of the system, because four-dimensionality allows local
fixities without in any way locking
or blocking the rest of the system's omnimotioning or
intertransforming. This
independence of local formulation corresponds exactly
with life experiences in Universe.
This omnifreedom is calculatively accommodated by synergetics'
fourth- and fifth-power
transformabilities. (See Sec.
465, "Rotation of Wheels
or Cams in Vector Equilibrium.")
(See Illus. 465.01.)
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970.00
First- and Third-Power Progressions of Vector Equilibria
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970.10
Rationality of Planar Domains and Interstices: There
is a 12F2 + 2
omniplanar-bound, volumetric-domain marriage with the
10F2 + 2 strictly spherical shell
accounting. (See tables at Sec.
955.40
and at Sec.
971.00.)
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![]() Fig. 970.20 |
970.20
Spheres and Spaces: The successive (20F3) - 20 (F
- 1)3 layer-shell,
planar-bound, tetrahedral volumes embrace only the tangential
inner and outer portions of
the concentrically closest-packed spheres, each of whose
respective complete concentric
shell layers always number 10F2 + 2. The volume of each
concentric vector-equilibrium
layer is defined and structured by the isotropic vector
matrix, or octet truss, occurring
between the spherical centers of any two concentric-sphere
layers of the vector
equilibrium, the inner part of one sphere layer and
the outer part of the other, with only
the center or nuclear ball being both its inner and
outer parts.
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970.21
There is realized herewith a philosophical synergetic
sublimity of
omnirational, universal, holistic, geometrical accounting
of spheres and spaces without
recourse to the transcendentally irrational pi .
(See drawings section.) (See Secs.
954.56 and
1032.)
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971.00
Table of Basic Vector Equilibrium Shell Volumes
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![]() Fig. 971.01 |
971.01
Relationships Between First and Third Powers of F
Correlated to
Closest-Packed Triangular Number Progression and Closest-Packed
Tetrahedral
Number Progression, Modified Both Additively and Multiplicatively
in Whole
Rhythmically Occurring Increments of Zero, One, Two,
Three, Four, Five, Six, Ten,
and Twelve, All as Related to the Arithmetical and Geometrical
Progressions,
Respectively, of Triangularly and Tetrahedrally Closest-Packed
Sphere Numbers
and Their Successive Respective Volumetric Domains,
All Correlated with the
Respective Sphere Numbers and Overall Volumetric Domains
of Progressively
Embracing Concentric Shells of Vector Equilibria: Short
Title: Concentric Sphere
Shell Growth Rates.
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971.02
The red zigzag between Columns 2 and 3 shows the progressive,
additive,
triangular-sphere layers accumulating progressively
to produce the regular tetrahedra.
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971.04
Column 5 is the tetrahedral number with the new nucleus.
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971.05
In Column 6, the integer SIX functions as zero in
the same manner in which
NINE functions innocuously as zero in all arithmetical
operations.
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971.06
In Column 6, we multiply Column 5 by a constant SIX,
to the product of
which we add the six-stage 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 wave-factor
growth crest and break of Column
7.
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971.09
Column 10 lists the cumulative, planar-bound, tetrahedral
volumes of the
arithmetical progression of third powers of the successive
frequencies of whole vector
equilibria. The vector equilibrium's initial nonfrequencied
tetra-volume, i.e., its quantum
value, is 20. The formula for obtaining the frequency-progressed
volumes of vector
equilibrium is:
Volume of VE = 20F3.
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971.10
In Column 11, we subtract the previous frequency-vector
equilibrium's
cumulative volume from the new one-frequency-greater
vector equilibrium's cumulative
volume, which yields the tetrahedral volume of the outermost
shell. The outer vector
equilibrium's volume is found always to be:
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971.11
Incidentally, the
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