The Duality of Whittaker Potential Theory: Fundamental Representations of Electromagnetism and Gravity, and Their Orthogonality
Mark Titleman

TL;DR
This paper explores Whittaker's dual potential theory, revealing how longitudinal waves underpin electromagnetism and gravity, with implications for cosmology, gravitational phenomena, and the fundamental structure of spacetime.
Contribution
It uncovers the profound physical implications of Whittaker's mathematical representations, linking them to modern cosmological and gravitational phenomena.
Findings
Longitudinal waves unify electromagnetism and gravity.
Implications for gravitational lensing and waves.
Connection to universe expansion and black hole dynamics.
Abstract
E. T. Whittaker produced two papers in 1903 and 1904 that, although sometimes considered mere mathematical statements (Barrett, 1993), held important implications for physical theory. The Whittaker 1903 paper united electrostatic and gravitational attraction as resulting from longitudinal waves - waves whose wavefronts propagate parallel to their direction. The Whittaker 1904 paper showed that electromagnetic waves resulted from the interference of two such longitudinal waves or scalar potential functions. Although unexplored, the implications of these papers are profound: gravitational lensing, gravitational waves, the Aharonov-Bohm effect, the existence of a hyperspace above or behind normal space, the elimination of gravitational and point charge singularities, MOND, and the expansion of the universe. This last implication can be related to the recent finding that black holes with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRelativity and Gravitational Theory · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Quantum Mechanics and Applications
