Theory of Vacuum Texture: Blackbody Radiation, Uncertainty Principle and Quantum Statistics
Yoko Suzuki, Kevin M. Mertes

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Theory of Vacuum Texture (TVT), proposing a new interpretation of quantum mechanics that explains blackbody radiation, the uncertainty principle, and quantum statistics through vacuum fluctuations and a threshold energy release condition.
Contribution
The TVT replaces energy quantization assumptions with a threshold postulate, providing a local hidden variable framework consistent with experiments and explaining quantum phenomena without quantum weirdness.
Findings
Blackbody radiation models align with experiments under TVT.
Uncertainty principle emerges as a statistical effect.
Predictions of ordered states for massive particles at low temperatures.
Abstract
Previously, we presented a new interpretation of quantum mechanics that revealed it is indeed possible to have a local hidden variable that is consistent with Bell's inequality experiments. In that article we suggested that the local hidden variable is associated with vacuum fluctuations. In this article we expound upon that notion by introducing the Theory of Vacuum Texture (TVT). Here we show that replacing the highly restrictive assumptions of the quantization of energy levels in a system with the simpler, less restrictive postulate that there exists a threshold in order for energy to be released. With this new postulate, the models of blackbody radiation is shown to be consistent with the experiments. We also show, that the threshold condition contributes to a localized vacuum energy which leads us to conclude that the uncertainty principle is a statistical effect. These conditions…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics · Quantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect
