Were the ancient Greeks right that space is continuous material plenum?
I.E. Bulyzhenkov

TL;DR
This paper explores the ancient Greek concept of space as a continuous material plenum, proposing a model where space consists of overlapping astroparticles with weak radial densities, supported by classical field theories.
Contribution
It presents a novel interpretation of space as a dense, continuous medium composed of overlapping astroparticles, grounded in Maxwell's and Einstein's classical field theories.
Findings
Space is modeled as a dense vertex network of astroparticles.
Elementary matter extends beyond perception with extremely weak radial densities.
The model aligns with classical field phenomenology and Einstein's gravitation.
Abstract
All visible bodies are bound dense vertices of overlapping astroparticles with extremely weak r^{-4} radial densities of elementary (and summary) matter beyond human perception and instrumental resolutions. The non-empty material space of the ancient Greeks have mathematical grounds in the self-consistent reading of Maxwell's phenomenology and Einstein's gravitation through continuous radial sources of classical fields.
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Mathematical Theories and Applications · History and Theory of Mathematics · Historical Astronomy and Related Studies
