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1010.01
A prime volume has unique domains but does not have
a nucleus.
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1010.02
A prime volume is different from a generalized regenerative
system.
Generalized regenerative systems have nuclei; generalized
prime volumes do not.
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1010.03
There are only three prime volumes: tetrahedron, octahedron,
and
icosahedron. Prime volumes are characterized exclusively
by external structural stability.
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1010.12
Complex bubble aggregates are partitioned into prime
volumetric domains
by interiorly subdividing prime areal domains as flat
drawn membranes.
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1010.21
All of the three foregoing non-nuclear-containing domains
of the
tetrahedron, octahedron, and icosahedron are defined
by the four spheres, six spheres, and twelve
spheres, respectively, which we have defined elsewhere
(see Sec.
610.20,
"Omnitriangular Symmetry: Three Prime Structural Systems")
as omnitriangulated
systems or as prime structural systems and as prime
volumetric domains. There are no
other symmetrical, non-nuclear-containing domains of
closest-packed, volume-embracing,
unit-radius sphere agglomerations.
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1010.22
While other total closest-packed-sphere embracements,
or agglomerations,
may be symmetrical or superficially asymmetrical in
the form of crocodiles, alligators,
pears, or billiard balls, they constitute complexedly
bonded associations of prime structural
systems. Only the tetrahedral, octahedral, and icosahedral
domains are basic structural
systems without nuclei. All the Platonic polyhedra and
many other more complex,
multidimensional symmetries of sphere groupings can
occur. None other than the three-
and-only prime structural systems, the tetrahedron,
octahedron, and icosahedron, can be
symmetrically produced by closest-packed spheres without
any interioral, i.e., nuclear,
sphere. (See Secs.
532.40,
610.20,
1010.20 and
1011.30.)
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1011.00
Omnitopology of Prime Volumes
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1011.33
Special case always has frequency and size-time.
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1011.34
Generalization is independent of size and time, but
the generalization
principle must be present in every special case of whatever
magnitude of size or time.
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1011.41
The phenomenon "congruence of vectors" occurs many
times in nature's
coordinate structuring, destructuring, and other intertransformings,
doubling again
sometimes with four vectors congruent, and even doubling
the latter once again to
produce eight congruent vectors in limit-transformation
cases, as when all eight tetrahedra
of the vector equilibrium become congruent with one
another. (See Sec.
461.08.) This
phenomenon often misleads the uninformed observer.
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1011.51
The prime vector equilibrium has a nucleus surrounded,
close-packingly and
symmetrically, by 12 uniradius spheres. (See Illus.
222.01.)
As we add unit radius sphere
layers to the prime vector equilibrium, the 12 balls
of the first, or prime, outer layer
become symmetrically enclosed by a second closest-packed,
unit radius layer of 42 balls
circumferentially closest packed. This initiates a vector
equilibrium with modular edge and
radius intervals that introduce system frequency at
its minimum of two.2
(Footnote 2: The number of balls in the outer shell of the vector equilibrium = 10 F2 + 2. The number 42, i.e., F2, i.e., 22 = 4, multiplied by 10 with the additive 2 = 42.) |
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1011.52
The edge frequency of two intervals between three balls
of each of the
vector equilibrium's 24 outer edges identifies the edges
of the eight outer facet triangles of
the vector equilibrium's eight edge-bonded (i.e., double-bonded)
tetrahedra, whose
common internal vertex is congruent with the vector
equilibrium's nuclear sphere. In each
of the vector equilibrium's square faces, you will see
nine spheres in planar arrays, having
one ball at the center of the eight (see Illus.
222.01),
each of whose eight edge spheres
belong equally to the adjacent tetrahedra's outwardly
displayed triangular faces. This
single ball at the center of each of the six square
faces provides the sixth sphere to stabilize
each of the original six half-octahedra formed by the
nuclear ball of the vector equilibrium
common with the six half-octahedra's common central
vertex around the six four-ball
square groups showing on the prime vector equilibrium's
surface. This second layer of 42
spheres thus provides the sixth and outermost ball to
complete the six-ball group of a
prime octahedron, thus introducing structural stability
increasing at a fourth-power rate to
the vector equilibrium.
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1011.57
But at F3 we still have only one true nuclear ball
situated symmetrically at
the volumetric center of three layers: the first of
12, the next of 42, and the outer layer of
92 balls. There is only one ball in the symmetrical
center of the system. This three-layer
aggregate has a total of 146 balls; as noted elsewhere
(see Sec. 419.05)
this relates to the
number of neutrons in Uranium Element #92.
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1011.61
At the F4, 162-ball layer, the eight potential nuclei
occurring in the mid-
triangle faces of the F3 layer are now omnisurrounded,
but as we have seen, this means
that each has as yet only the 12 balls around it of
the F0 nuclear-development phase. Not
until the F5, 252-ball layer occurs do the eight potential
second-generation nuclei become
structurally enclosed by the 42-ball layer, which has
as yet no new potential nuclei
showing on its surface__ergo, even at the F5 level, the
original prime nucleus considered
and enclosingly developed have not become full-fledged,
independently qualified,
regenerative nuclei. Not until F6 and the 362-ball layer
has been concentrically completed
do we now have eight operatively new, regenerative,
nuclear systems operating in
partnership with the original nucleus. That is, the
first generation of omnisymmetrical,
concentric, vector equilibrium shells has a total of
nine in full, active, operational
condition. These nine, 8 + 1, may have prime identification
with the eight operationally
intereffective integers of arithmetic and the ninth
integer's zero functioning in the prime
behaviors of eternally self-regenerative Universe. We
may also recall that the full family of
Magic Numbers of the atomic isotopes modeled tetrahedrally
occurs at the sixth frequency
(see Sec.
995).
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1012.00
Nucleus as Nine = None = Nothing
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1012.01
Nucleus as nine; i.e., non (Latin); i.e., none (English);
i.e., nein (German);
i.e., neuf (French); i.e., nothing; i.e., interval integrity;
i.e., the integrity of absolute
generalized octaval cosmic discontinuity accommodating
all special-case "space" of space-
time reality. (See Secs.
415.43
and
445.10.)
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1012.13
As shown in Numerology (Sec.
1223), when we begin to
follow through the
sequences of wave patterning, we discover this frequency
modulation capability
permeating the "Indig's" octave system of four positive,
four negative, and zero nine. (See
drawings section.)
Indigs of Numerology:
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![]() Fig. 1012.14A ![]() Fig. 1012.14B |
1012.14
Applying the Indig-Numerology to the multiplication
tables, this wave
phenomenon reappears dramatically, with each integer
having a unique operational effect
on other integers. For instance, you look at the total
multiplication patterns of the prime
numbers three and five and find that they make a regular
X. The foumess ( = + 4) and the
fiveness ( = - 4) are at the positive-negative oscillation
center; they decrease and then
increase on the other side where the two triangles come
together with a common center in
bow-tie form. You find that the sequences of octaves
are so arranged that the common
ball can be either number eight or it could be zero
or it could be one. That is, it makes it
possible for waves to run through waves without having
interference of waves. (See
drawings section.)
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![]() Fig. 1012.15 |
1012.15
Each ball can always have a neutral function among
these aggregates. It is a
nuclear ball whether it is in a planar array or in an
omnidirectional array. It has a function
in each of the two adjacent systems which performs like
bonding. This is the single energy-
transformative effect on closest-packed spheres which,
with the arhythmical sphere
space
space
sphere
space
space__suggests identity
with the neutron-proton
interchangeable functioning.
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| Next Section: 1012.30 |