Tracy Slatyer, MIT, Cambridge, MA
Homepage(s): ArXiv (86), HRI, inSPIRE, Wikipedia, YouTube
- What If We Never Find Dark Matter?: Physicists are chasing an increasingly elusive quarry (SA), Tracy R. Slatyer and Tim Tait, 20 August 2024
- CMB limits on decaying dark matter beyond the ionization threshold, Clara Xu, Wenzer Qin, Tracy R. Slatyer, 20 August 2024
- Inferring the Morphology of the Galactic Center Excess with Gaussian Processes, Edward D. Ramirez, Yitian Sun, Matthew R. Buckley, Siddharth Mishra-Sharma, Tracy R. Slatyer, 28 October 2024
- YouTube: Institute for Theoretical Physics, Berkeley, 2024,
Mainz Institute for Theoretical Physics, 20017
First email: 30 October 2024
Dear Prof. Dr. Tracy Slatyer:
I was introduced to your work from Stacy McGaugh’s blog (article) about your Scientific American article, What if We Never Find Dark Matter? After reviewing your 2024 Berkeley lecture, your 2017 lecture in Mainz, and your most recent ArXiv articles, I wondered if our naive approach has merit. We unwittingly backed into a nascent model by following 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?
Warmly,
Bruce