TO: Stacy McGaugh, Case Western Reserve, Cleveland, Ohio
FM: Bruce E. Camber
RE: Your articles about early structure formation, especially Accelerated Structure Formation: the Early Emergence of Massive Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies, Stacy S. McGaugh, James M. Schombert, Federico Lelli, Jay Franck, June 2024; and What if we never find dark matter? from your Triton blog, 15 October 2024 in response to the Scientific American article, What if We Never Find Dark Matter? by Slatyer & Tait; also your homepage(s) including Wikipedia and YouTube.
31 October 2024: Second email
Dear Prof. Dr. Stacy McGaugh:
What an extraordinary career you’ve had. I write to thank you for your blog on Slatyer & Tait’s question.
We unwittingly backed into a nascent model of an exponentially-expanding universe by following the embedded geometries of just tetrahedrons and octahedrons down the 45 notations to particle physics and then the 67 notations to the Planck base units. Going the other way, there were 90 steps to the current age of the universe. That’s 202 base-2 notations that start at the Planck scale. If we assume Planck Time is our first moment in time and the Planck units manifest as an infinitesimal sphere, the drama begins: https://81018.com/vision/
Would you care to comment? Please. You can be as tough on us as you would be on any uppidity student! Or, even better, you can engage a team of your best students to correct us (ASTR 328/PHYS 328 | ASTR 428/PHYS 428).
Warmly,
Bruce
First email: 30 October 2024
Dear Prof. Dr. Stacy McGaugh:
I am now following your work here: https://81018.com/mcgaugh/
It was your work that opened Tracy Statyer’s article: https://81018.com/statyer/
Have you ever looked at the exponential notation of what you would consider natural units (like Planck’s base units)? Not many have. https://81018.com/202-1/
As idiosyncratic as it is, no undergraduate, graduate, or post doc has told us why we are wrong. Nor has a wide spectrum of scholars. Perhaps you and your students can help us (ASTR 328/PHYS 328 | ASTR 428/PHYS 428).
Thank you.
Warmly,
Bruce