TFNR - Mass and gravitational phenomena

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It is the state of a space-time domain where the distribution of the stochastic perturbations that constitute the Elementary Action is lower than the mean distribution. So, in a massive domain, as for a particle of matter, we can identify a “gradient”, a particular form of the correlation of the distributions of the intensity of the elementary fluctuations (Perturbation) of the point-events that compose that domain, in the sense of a minor intensity of the same perturbations.

This is the root of gravitational phenomena.

The fundamental definition of mass, strictly related to the properties of the Field of Elementary Action, is the difference of the intensity of Perturbation, the non-directional component of Action in a space-time domain.

The concept of mass, in relation with the Principle of Equivalence, can be expressed in more than one way.

In a relativistic perspective, the mass can be defined as the curvature of space-time. The curvature is not an effect, a phenomenon, deriving from the existence of a mass, but is the true nature of the mass itself.

Another way of defining mass can be referred to the temperature of the Field that correspond to the point or the domain mean intensity of the fluctuations of the space-time metric.

See also

Links to the tables of contents of TFNR Paper