If your new ideas have utility, you may wish to explore patent protection. Discovering a scientific proof (weight is caused by gravity?) likely can not be patented. If no patent is involved, the present scientific method would require you to publish your theories and subject them to peer review (including proposed experiments if any). Submitting your technical paper to a word-recognized journal such as Nature would assure careful review by experts in your chosen field before publication. The date on your paper would prove priority (who published first). If you can not convince experts of your theories you may need to do more work to clarify certain issues and experts would also likely know if others have published some or all of your ideas. Good luck.
2006-09-02 01:13:26
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answer #1
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answered by Kes 7
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Get a PhD in Physics and publish your work in a scientific journal. It's the best way to do it.
Now if your law doesn't contain mathematical equations, or doesn't make testable predictions, or doesn't explain the current observables, then chances are it won't go very far.
If your law claims that Einstein's predictions were wrong or that Quantum Mechanics is wrong and needs to be replaced, then your law is probably wrong.
If you cannot read and understand a peer-reviewed journal paper in physics, your theory is probably wrong.
Hope that helps. Don't let it discourage you, just make sure you realize that if your theory is correct, it has to agree with all current measurements. Unless you know what those measurements are (the numbers), you'll have a hard time promoting your theory.
2006-09-01 22:42:46
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answer #2
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answered by Davon 2
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Documentation of unification of fundamental forces would indeed be revolutionary.
Please excuse us for sounding sceptical, becuase there are some astonishingly bright minds working on this problem, who have access to equipment costing billions of dollars which is required to test it.
If you did not generate your theory through experimentation, and I cannot see how it is possible that you did, your theory is unquestionably wrong. Why do I say that? Because 'common sense', the feel we get for physical interactions in the everyday world, is NOT an accurate sense of the underlying interactions of the physical universe. Indeed, reality is so strange and counterintuitive that I doubt more than a handful of people on the planet can really claim to understand it. There are many more who are aware of the nature of interactions, but few indeed who really understand them.
2006-09-02 00:58:08
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answer #3
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answered by poorcocoboiboi 6
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In addition to inquisitivechaos answer I'd like to add: I appreciate your interest in physics, but I expect some problems with your theory since you claim "that is law of everything" and "his law will change our world to next level of science".
No one of the real ingenious physicists of now and the last centuries claimed that, so I guess you don't have studied physics, and are not really aware of the current state of that subject. A lot of really smart people are working on these problems and we know of some properties such a theory must have, and these properties really acquire some really hard math to be treated in a adequate way.
You should go to a university and discuss your theory with a PhD student or a Postdoc, maybe with a professor. *BUT* be prepared that he/she will find some fundamental flaws in your theory, don't be too disappointed and don't start to argue too much. These people are not stupid and have spent a lot of time to learn about physics, so assume that they are probably right and you're wrong.
Each institute I know is visited from time to time by people who claim that they found out that Einstein is wrong, they found the theory of everything, the found proofs for the existence of god, and so on.
Physicists are usually nice people, so we listen to them, but I guess you know what happens: Most of these people have fundamental mistakes in their theories, assume unprovable things, ignore experimental facts.
So be prepared that the same thing might happen to you, and your theory might be wrong. If that happens, see this discussion as a nice chance to learn something new, show respect for their knowledge, as they showed respect for you by inviting you for a short discussion although you didn't publish your theory in a respected way (e.g. by publishing it in a peer reviewed journal).
2006-09-02 01:25:00
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answer #4
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answered by Wonko der Verständige 5
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Who does not? If a unmarried human would be proved to violate the regulations of organic physics then the two they have replaced our understanding of organic physics (which happens with new discoveries) or they're themselves supernatural (the 1st ever supernatural being to be stated interior the organic universe.) So, yeah, i might supply you a gamble to tell me what you think of. *** Now, if the the the teeth Fairy visited you and gave you a dollar, might you nonetheless disclaim his existence?
2016-12-11 19:28:33
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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There are plenty of scientists in India. Teach it to them. That will help you find flaws in the theory, and also help you communicate it better. Once you get some scientists to understand it, they will know how to demonstrate it. I'll be watching the journals for your name. Good luck.
2006-09-02 16:13:23
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answer #6
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answered by Frank N 7
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if you have such a idea then try to make it public like put it on a website and share it with some Internet communities who knows you may be even nominated for the Nobel prize by some university for your law of everything
2006-09-02 01:54:59
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answer #7
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answered by pradeep s 1
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i was waiting on your demonstration but i notice no mention of the laws of thermodynamics so im pretty sure your either wrong and going against physics or right and, nah i dont think your right but i really do believe that your full of the crap that comes out of einsteins ***.
2006-09-02 22:00:05
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answer #8
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answered by moefan 2
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Contact the people at Coast to Coast AM. They will be able to tell you what you need to do.
2006-09-01 20:32:42
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answer #9
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answered by Steve N 3
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talk to your teachers
they should be of some help
2006-09-01 22:19:26
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answer #10
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answered by Tzone 1
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