1. Introduction
Sommerfeld’s fine-structure constant α describes the coupling respectively measure of the strength of the electromagnetic force that determines the interaction between electrically charged elementary particles (electron) and photons (light). This coupling is given by the relation [1]
(1)
where e is the elementary charge of the electron,
is the permittivity of the vacuum,
is the reduced Planck constant, and c is the speed of light. The precisely determined CODATA value is [2]
(2)
A new evaluation of coupling values of fundamental forces like the α constant paves the way to a unification of sciences and a full understanding of the world’s very existence. We comment on an impressive new approach given by Guynn [3] that contributes to this topic. In Chapter 2 Sommerfeld’s fine-structure constant α was recast to indicate an impressive paradigmatic reciprocity relation of terms that contain the galactic velocity
. This relation was further simplified finally yielding
. Chapter 2 also deals with approximations for the electron charge, mass and gyromagnetic factor. Indications of a golden mean signature behind Guynn’s approach were shortly discussed in Chapter 3, but should be explained in more detail in a separate contribution. Golden mean approximations of the maximum of Guynn’s difference velocity
were summarized. A relation to Mozafari’s world average value for the interaction coupling constant
is suggested in Chapter 4 [4].
The interested reader may also follow the contribution of Stergios Pellis about relationships connecting physical constants [5] [6].
2. Comment to Guynn’s Approach
Guynn’s pioneering relation for Sommerfeld’s fine-structure constant α [3] can be rewritten in a form that indicates a nice reciprocity relation using the galactic rotation velocity vg due to Thomas precession [7]
(3)
With
(4)
where
is a dimension-preserving factor [3].
Such reciprocity relations, frequently found in nature, point again to the golden mean dominance of physical science and life in general [8] [9].
When using the approximation (4) and choosing
[3], the fine-structure constant can be estimated simply as
(5)
However, the difference to the experimentally estimated value is only 0.000000249. Alterations of “fundamental” constants recommended by the IRT
theory [10] are quite well in this reliability range [7]. Therefore, we cannot exclude that the conjecture
is correct.
Again a paradigmatic reciprocity relation can be formulated using
[8]
(6)
This is the real mystery behind number 137, if any mystery can be seen at all. It may be considered as a signature of matter-wave duality and galactic entanglement. Schwinger’s intuitive α/π is cutting edge [11], but QED is not.
Since Sommerfeld had investigated the spectrum of hydrogen and assigned the speed of the electron in the first Bohr orbit as fine-structure constant
[1], this “constant” has been found to be more universal and connected to rotating entities “from particle scale to galactic scale” [3]. Therefore, it is recommended to replace the designation fine-structure constant simply by Sommerfeld constant.
Some other approximate relations for α have been applied in Chapter 4.
Another approximation for
using the golden mean
is [12]
(7)
Also the elementary charge e can be approximated using the galactic velocity vg
(8)
The exact CODATA value is =1.602176634 × 10−19 C.
With
as a calibration constant, Equation (8) can be recast into
(9)
Using Guynn’s vg, the mass of the electron can be approximated in the same way giving (see Appendix A2)
(10)
where
is again a dimension-preserving factor [3].
The concise CODATA value is
.
The quotient e/me then delivers
(11)
compared to the CODATA value of
.
One could more precisely adapt these approximations by a small variation of the involved “fundamental” physical constants.
Guynn’s convincing formula for the mass me of the electron used, besides vg, the maximum vm of the difference velocity (see Chapter 3).
(12)
In our approximate approach for me in Equation (10) we used the simple relation (23) given in Chapter 3.
With respect to the importance of the circle constant π an excerpt from reference [8] is given:
… the area A enclosed by a circle of radius 1 yields
(13)
where π is Archimedes’ constant, the well-known circle constant. One obtains the circumference C by using the reciprocal of the integrand
(14)
This connection between the boundary and the enclosed area is of fundamental importance. It may be thought of as a geometrical analog to the more general matter-wave duality…
The Lorentz integral angular limit in Guynn’s approach is equivalent to relation (13) [3]
(15)
The value of
in relation (4) is
.
Guynn’s famous and stunningly simple relation for the anomalous gyromagnetic factor ge of the electron [3] can also be treated in a different way. The second term of his relation
(16)
is reformulated giving a function of solely the galactic velocity
(17)
Using Guynn’s
, (18)
The approximation holds
(19)
respectively
(20)
where
is the golden ratio;
,
[3].
The theoretical background behind the experimental value of electron’s gyromagnetic factor includes among other things the relativistic mass correction, given by the Lorentz transform in accordance with Guynn’s approach [3], whereas the present author already had applied the IRT theory leading to a reduced ge value of
[8] ?
This comment is a Chapter of a paper in preparation about “Golden Ratio Signature Behind Guynn’s Matter/Space Approach”, scanning the different sides of the same coin [13] [14]. The puzzling question is whether frequently observed values have exact golden mean ratio. It has been illustrated in Figure 1 that the maximum of the Hardy-Suleiman relation of
at
[15] is clearly related to the maximum of Guynn’s difference velocity curve of
at
[3]. The number
can be considered as fundamental, because it is connected to phase transformations from particle dimension to galactic ones [16].
Turning back to Sommerfeld’s constant, an approximation of α using
can be formulated as
(21)
where Ee is the rest energy of the electron.
3. Maximum Velocity βm and Golden Mean
The maximum velocity vm of the difference curve between rotation velocity and precession velocity according to Guynn [3] can be approximated by golden mean based quantities or π based ones, remembering that
is the maximum of the Hardy-Suleiman relation [10] [16], before used by El Naschie and coworkers in the ε-infinity theory [17] [18]. Both numbers φ and π are related to each other [19]. One can confirm the following approximations
(22)
(23)
(24)
(25)
Following Figure 1, a simple golden mean based relation approximates well only the left side of the blue Guynn curve up to the maximum of
at
, allowing the right side to reach a value of zero at
(26)
Using this relation, Guynn’s starting difference velocity relation (27) can tentatively be approximated by a more complicated golden mean based limited power series expansion (28).
Figure 1. Difference velocity vd versus velocity β (blue) according to [3] compared to an approximation (relation (28) red). The green curve represents the scaled square root of matter energy density given by [10]. The scale factor is 3/2 (see relation (25)). The black curve depicts relation (26).
(27)
(28)
The obtained results were depicted in Figure 1. A slightly less well-fitted but simpler approximation is
.
4. Sommerfeld’s Constant and Mozafari’s Coupling Constant
One can obtain a further approximation of Sommerfeld’s constant by using βm
(29)
Remarkably, a reciprocal term connected with this relation resembles Mozafari’s recently published world average value for the interaction coupling constant
[4] giving
(30)
This value was precisely confirmed by measurement and QCD analysis at CERN [20]:
(31)
with uncertainties ± 0.0014 (fit) ± 0.0007 (scale) ± 0.0008 (model) ± 0.0001 (param).
One can formulate another numerical relation for the coupling constant αs using relation (23)
(32)
Turning to results of the IRT theory and matter—dark matter coupling in disk galaxies [21], one can give a further relation for αs (notice the factor 5 combined with the IRT maximum of em/e0 in relation (24))
(33)
where rc is the core radius of the galaxy, representing the distance from the galaxy center to the core where matter density is one half of the central matter density, and rs is the half-velocity radius.
A golden mean based sketching of the value for αs used a simple reciprocity relation [22]. One cansplitthis relation delivering a term that represents the
inverse circumsphere radius
of a regular icosahedron of unit edge length
(34)
We see that the grand unification of the sciences, arts and consciousness has made some progress again [6] [23].
5. Conclusion
Guynn’s approach is a cornucopia of overflowing ideas inspiring metrologists to confirm or measure anew fundamental physical constants. The relation between Sommerfeld’s α constant and the galactic velocity vg points towards a more global importance of this fundamental forces’ coupling value. Also the world average value for the interaction coupling constant
was found to be related to the maximum of the galactic velocity. It is evident that the grand unification of the sciences, arts and consciousness has made some progress again. It is also evident that QED seems to be not more than a sometimes helpful construct.
Acknowledgements
The present author was interested in the matter here presented, since he built long time ago an electrically driven gyroscope for experiments in the physics beginner’s course at the University of Regensburg already in 1973 [24]. He is still grateful today for the contagious enthusiasm of his former colleague Gerd Busse, retired professor at the IKT, University of Stuttgart, Germany.