Refine
Year of publication
- 2013 (65) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (49)
- Conference Proceeding (10)
- Part of a Book (2)
- Other (2)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Habilitation (1)
Keywords
- Bacillus atrophaeus (1)
- Distorsion des oberen Sprunggelenks (1)
- Epithel (1)
- Fibroblast (1)
- Sprunggelenkorthesen (1)
- Wundheilung (1)
- ankle braces (1)
- ankle sprain (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor (1)
- calorimetric gas sensor;hydrogen peroxide;wireless sensor system (1)
- carbonized rice husk (1)
- epithelization (1)
- fibulare Bandruptur (1)
- human dermal fibroblasts (1)
- hydrogen peroxide (1)
- rupture of the fibular ligament (1)
- sterilisation (1)
- wound healing (1)
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (65) (remove)
The concept of an injective affine embedding of the quantum states into a set of classical states, i.e., into the set of the probability measures on some measurable space, as well as its relation to statistically complete observables is revisited, and its limitation in view of a classical reformulation of the statistical scheme of quantum mechanics is discussed. In particular, on the basis of a theorem concerning a non-denseness property of a set of coexistent effects, it is shown that an injective classical embedding of the quantum states cannot be supplemented by an at least approximate classical description of the quantum mechanical effects. As an alternative approach, the concept of quasi-probability representations of quantum mechanics is considered.
Our world is well ordered in measurement and number : or why natural constants are as they are
(2013)
All the important natural constants can be logically explained with and derived from the first four ordinal numbers, 1, 2, 3 and 4, its addition to ten and finally the standard values for obviously maximal feasibility Ω and the optimum in our world, the Golden Section (GS), i.e. the number sequences 273 and 618. They both are the first three numbers of irrational results by an arithmetical transformation of simple geometrical relationships by creating multiplicity out of singularity. Both of them show that the infinite is inherent in finiteness and explain in a simple way the smallest deviations and fluctuations between the physical AS-IS state and the obvious spiritual ideal behind: Wherever we look in this world, and especially in important key-positions, we regularly find these sequences. All of the above mentioned numbers so seem to be key players in our world, what can be demonstrated by the derivation of natural constants.