Publications by authors named "Paul Frampton"

To describe the dark side of the universe, we adopt a novel approach where dark energy is explained as an electrically charged majority of dark matter. Dark energy, as such, does not exist. The Friedmann equation at the present time coincides with that in a conventional approach, although the cosmological "constant" in the Electromagnetic Accelerating Universe (EAU) Model shares a time dependence with the matter component.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study presents a new method for evenly coating hard carbon powders using fluidized bed chemical vapor deposition, which is beneficial for catalytic and electrochemical uses.
  • To optimize powder retention and minimize loss, the reactor design was informed by computational fluid dynamics simulations that evaluated how gas flow rates affect powder behavior.
  • The process utilized specific tin complexes as precursors, successfully creating hard carbon-sulfur and hard carbon-selenium composites that could be useful in electrocatalysis and as anodes in sodium-ion batteries.
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We discuss the relationship between dark matter and the entropy of the universe, with the premise that dark matter exists in the form of primordial black holes (PBHs) in a hierarchy of mass tiers. The lightest tier includes all PBHs with masses below one hundred solar masses. The second-lightest tier comprises intermediate-mass PIMBHs within galaxies, including the Milky Way.

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It is speculated how dark energy in a brane world can help reconcile an infinitely cyclic cosmology with the second law of thermodynamics. A cyclic model is described, in which dark energy with w<-1 equation of state leads to a turnaround at a time, extremely shortly before the would-be big rip, at which both volume and entropy of our Universe decrease by a gigantic factor, while very many independent similarly small contracting universes are spawned. The entropy of our model decreases almost to zero at turnaround but increases for the remainder of the cycle by a vanishingly small amount during contraction, empty of matter, then by a large factor during inflationary expansion.

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