Książka Frequency Longji Li

Frequency

The Universal Language of All Things

Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Dostępność: Zapowiedź
Wydanie 06. 06. 2026
142.06
Frequency: The Language of All Things is a popular-science introduction to Energy Quantum Theory (EQ...

Informacje o książce

Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
286
EAN
9798199641784
Enbook ID
52762173
Waga
387
Wymiary
152 x 229 x 15

Pełny opis

Frequency: The Language of All Things is a popular-science introduction to Energy Quantum Theory (EQT), a proposed framework that reinterprets particles, forces, dark matter, dark energy, and cosmic evolution through one central idea: frequency may be more than a descriptive property of physical systems; it may be a fundamental coordinate of existence.
Beginning with Planck's formula (E=h\nu) and Einstein's (E=mc^2), the book asks a simple but far-reaching question: if energy and mass can both be expressed through frequency, can the universe be read as a vast spectrum of frequency structures? From this starting point, the book introduces the EQT frequency table, a panoramic map extending from the ultra-low-frequency field associated with dark energy to the Planck-scale boundary of known physics. On this table, photons, electrons, protons, gravitons, W/Z bosons, quarks, neutrinos, dark matter candidates, and cosmological background fields are arranged according to their characteristic frequencies.
The book does not seek to replace the Standard Model or general relativity. Instead, it treats them as extraordinarily successful theories that must be recovered in their proper limits. EQT asks a deeper mechanistic question: why do particles have the properties they do, why do the four forces occupy different ranges of strength and distance, and why do some parts of the universe remain invisible to ordinary electromagnetic observation? In this interpretation, gravity appears as a low-frequency density-gradient effect, electromagnetism as a mid-frequency low-dissipation field, the strong force as high-frequency resonant condensation, and the weak force as an ultra-high-frequency trans-frequency trigger.
The book also applies this frequency perspective to the two greatest invisible components of the cosmos. Dark matter is described as a mid-frequency field whose weak electromagnetic visibility arises from frequency mismatch, while its gravitational influence comes from density-gradient effects. Dark energy is interpreted as an ultra-low-frequency negative-feedback field whose effective negative pressure drives the accelerated expansion of the universe. These proposals are presented not as final answers, but as testable hypotheses connected to experiments and observations such as ADMX, CASPEr, DESI, Euclid, LISA, the HL-LHC, and future colliders.
A major theme of the book is scientific honesty. Each proposed mechanism is accompanied by limits and failure conditions. EQT currently cannot precisely calculate all particle masses, solve the generation problem, provide a complete theory of quantum gravity, or explain the physical basis of consciousness. The book therefore presents EQT not as a completed theory of everything, but as a structured research program: a map of possible mechanisms, gaps, predictions, and experimental tests.
Written for a broad but intellectually curious audience, Frequency: The Language of All Things invites readers to see the universe as a layered spectrum of vibrations, condensations, gradients, and resonances. From the formation of protons in the early universe to the stability of DNA and the emergence of life, the book proposes that frequency may be one of the deepest organizing languages through which nature writes its structures.