Abstrato
New Concept of Space
Ilgaitis Prusis*, Peteris Prusis
The perception of space in which objects and perhaps events have relative position and direction is one of the first things people learn in their lives. Ultimately space has always been an important part of the majority of physics theories, conceived as three linear infinite dimensions in classical mechanics or as four dimensional Einsteinian space-time.
If there is a force acting onto some object in space it would indicate the presence of some force field as the ultimate cause of the force itself. Contemporary physics would consider that all force fields found in space are contained by that space. According to the current main understanding of physics, space itself does not require any force field to be present.
However, there is no true evidence for the existence of space without any force field(s) as well and there is no pure evidence for infinity of the space. It is only a presumption.
In contradiction to this very basic principle of contemporary physics, we here propose the new concept that space and physical force field are mutually dependent entities of the same phenomena. If the force field does not exist, then the corresponding space does not exist as well. And vice versa, if space does not exist, there is no force field present. As a result of such a principle, it is possible to describe each specific force field with a universal space equation, which has significant consequences.