Alexander Franklin Mayer

Theoretical Physicist and Cosmologist  

1 February 2006

Welcome!

For a number of months now at Stanford University (Physics), I have been quietly working on a book entitled The Many Directions of Time, which I anticipate will go to press in 2006. Here you will find a preview of related 'digital lectures' that have been created to appeal to a wide global audience including topic experts as well as students, amateur astronomers and scientific professionals of all varieties.

The Introduction (17 PowerPoint slides) will take you less than 10 minutes to go through and should convince you that the larger body of work (Lectures 1 and 2) are very much worth your while to investigate.

The lectures are based on a single underlying idea that drove the insights they contain: that time is not a single dimension of spacetime but rather a local geometric distinction in spacetime. While this may seem very esoteric, it is actually quite simple.

Not too long ago, people thought the Earth was flat, which meant they thought that gravity pointed in the same direction everywhere. Today, we think of that as a silly idea, but at the same time, most people today (including most scientists) still think of spacetime as if it were a big box with 3 space dimensions and 1 time dimension. So, like gravity for a flat Earth, the single time dimension for the 'big box universe' points in one direction, from the Big-Bang into the future. A lot of lip service is given to the idea of "curved spacetime", but the simplistic 3+1 'box' remains the dominant concept of what cosmic spacetime is like.

Imagine that 'the arrow of time' in the Universe, like gravity on Earth, is pretty much the same everywhere, yet also different everywhere relative to everywhere else. That means that the 'arrow of time' points in different directions in spacetime depending on where you are, so time has a geometry just like space has a geometry. The novel idea that there are an infinite number of time dimensions in the Universe revolutionizes gravitational theory and much of modern science with it. A number of outstanding scientific mysteries are definitively solved, including observations that lead to the concepts of 'dark energy' and 'dark matter'. You will know what these are after you read the lectures.

My pending personal URL is alexandermayer.com, which currently redirects to this Website. The draft release was on 27 December 2005.

Download the lectures
A New Gravitational Effect
(a quick 10-minute read)
Introduction (1 MB   PowerPoint)

Introduction (1 MB   PDF)


A Correction to the Gravitational Model
large file: right-click the link and save it
Lecture 1 (18 MB  signed PDF)


The Many Directions of Time –
Solving the Cosmology Puzzle
large file: right-click the link and save it
Lecture 2 (15 MB  signed PDF)


Software
Adobe Reader (PDF viewer)
Contact
email: afmayer AT stanford.edu
Box 19337 Stanford, California 94309 USA


An essay by astronomer George Coyne
Modern Cosmology and Life's Meaning
This brief essay reflects the ideas that evolved from 20th century cosmology and implies that those who value their religious faith can also fully embrace modern scientific ideas and progress.
IT IS MOST SUITABLE FOR LAYPERSONS.
Essay ( small PDF)
ArtistMy friend, Tad Glinkiewicz, who helped me create this Webpage.