Hi everybody!
When I’ve visited the exhibition “Annus Mirabilis of Albert Einstein” in 2005 in Bern, I did not expect to learn much new. Indeed, I left with the sentiment that I knew much, if not all of that already from my university studies. Nevertheless, I had to realise later that the visit had a major impact on me.
Of one side, I have realised that between 1905 when the Special Relativity theory was published until 1915, when General Relativity was made public, ten years went on, a laps of time certainly full of work and efforts. So, I’ve concluded, if I have something valuable to tell, I should not be afraid to work even 10 years to render it public.
On the other hand, the nearly physical contact with the exposed objects revealed in me the feeling that “Oh my God! We have here some very old stuff!”. Even if his theory is the leading theory of today’s science and has still much success, we are driving a 100-years old car! It is just unbelievable that we did not change since nearly anything in our perception of macro-world! I became overwhelmed by questions like: “If a genius like him would weak-up today, what he would tell about his theory?”, “What Einstein missed to build a more up-to date theory?”, “Did we really not discover anything major that would lead to better answers to modern sciences?”. Such questions led me to do an inventory of discoveries made since he published his ground-breaking works. I’ve realised that there are many discoveries made since, that Einstein could not know about or he did not accept. Examples include antimatter (discovered in 1926), quantum-mechanics (refined at the same epoch), elementary particles and forces, high energy physics, topology, hyperbolic geometry (although discovered earlier, still not used yet anywhere), and many-many astronomic observations (like black-holes, Big Bang, expansion of the Universe, etc.). Step-by-step, I became convinced that if we add all these ingredients to the old knowledge, we are able to build a new picture of Nature, a theory that is able to answer the big questions left open in modern sciences. This is how M-Ah was born, and is about to be made public here.
So, I wish you patience in discovering on these pages something new! I can insure you that worths the effort!
Tibor