Foreword

Like life, physics must always evolve. The more we search and understand, the more it must change. Yet there are many truths in physics that are universal and timeless. They form the bedrock on which these ideas are based, ideas that create a bridge between classical and quantum physics and help build a theory of everything.

What I have tried to show here is how standard, undergraduate physics can provide satisfying explanations for some of nature's deepest mysteries. Our best understanding of the way the universe operates comes through physics, due to its on-going study of the interaction between matter and energy. However, these are essentially made from the same thing, for both are vibrations of an entity intimately connected with angular momentum or spin. This entity is known as a field, a highly dynamic physical quantity that varies in space-time and can be expressed mathematically at each point. For our purposes though, we need only consider electromagnetic E-M fields. Light and even gravity, which will be shown to have its origin in E-M fields, are both manifestations of such entities. In fact, these fields are the basis of every physical thing.

So while matter and energy are made from the same rapidly spinning E-M fields, energy is 2-D while matter is three and has a different structure to energy, and thus distorts and compacts space-time, acquiring inertia or mass, leading to gravity. These fields vibrate by becoming their opposite in an endless cycle of change or yin-yang, a profound concept known since ancient times in China.

This book is written for the general science reader so that as wide an audience as possible may consider these ideas and how they lead to a theory of everything. We will see how all the forces, and all the matter in the universe have their origin in these fields. Elementary particles are produced from sustained wave motion of the E-M field that stores a fixed value of vibration or energy in their structure, using energy originally supplied by the big-bang and corresponding to the particle’s mass. This structure is called a soliton. Here we are interested in how matter is produced from these solitons and how these solitons interact.

Writing this work would not have been possible without the help and thoughts of many people, some of whom are mentioned in the references section. Two especially have shown me key concepts which I have used to hopefully build a coherent theory. They are Qui-Hong Hu in his 2005 paper "The Nature of the Electron" [1], and Claudio Rebbi who wrote the article "Solitons" for Scientific American in February 1979 [2].

If I have pondered and seen some things it's because so many brilliant people have shone their light. I simply looked.

Again, I am deeply grateful to my friends and family who let me get on and do this. Especially my children who so enthusiastically helped with the production, publishing and graphics as well as truthful and insightful comments throughout the many stages of this book’s preparation.

My aim here is to offer some new ideas that may be useful to science and make physics more real and physical. Of course, experiment is the ultimate arbiter of all theories, and I hope one day someone may devise an experiment that shows this underlying structure that exists in everything. The origin of everything.

The Origin of Everything
(Online Edition)