Publication & Strategy

We are approaching publication in three phases.

Phase I

Six highly packed papers were peer reviewed and published without indexing in the major archives. The goal was to achieve recognized peer reviewed publications but receive little media attention. While the mathematics was well understood, the principles needed considerably more work, especially with respect to frames of references and derivation of the physical constants. The papers established precedent, presenting solutions to 82.5% of the most challenging problems in modern physics (covering general physics, quantum gravity, cosmology & GR).

Phase Ii

In this phase, presently underway, we have received an acceptance for the paper entitled, Measurement Quantization. This paper contains new and clarified derivations for all the problems resolved in the prior six papers. The paper explores the physical significance of Measurement Quantization (MQ). Several experiments are analyzed and shown to reflect predictions of MQ. Importantly, predictions of ‘new physics’ are made and those predictions are shown to have already been measured, analyzed and confirmed.

This paper was submitted to the International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics. It entered peer review on August 16, 2022 and was accepted on Oct. 28. It was published on Jan. 25, 2023.

International Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics
Measurement Quantization

Phase Iii

In this final phase, the goal is to submit the remaining 51 prepared papers for peer review and publication. These papers are all presently in pre-print on Research Gate. They are ready for submission. But because the paper - Measurement Quantization - was written to serve as an introduction and a source reference, we must complete Phase II (publication) before submitting the remaining 51 papers. Moreover, because these papers have a certain order of dependent calculations, they need to be phased, so as to properly cite the supporting calculations in earlier phase papers. If we do not phase their publication, many of the cosmological papers would require 20,000 words and up to 350 expressions before a discussion could even begin. This did not seem to be a wise strategy.