These works of art are conceived to encompass
a wide range of art styles and experimentation. I use the tools of art to
research many areas of science and mathematics. For many of these works through
an inquiry into the nature of life itself at its
essential nature are rendered to express alchemical living presences and living
lifetronic ecologies. I understand that consciousness
arises according to the conditions resonance and harmonics. String theory in
physics says that everything is ultimately rooted in a kind of universal
harmonic hardware.
While cubism was an exploration into the principles of
form, the structuring of relationships existing between perception and form,
Holoqubism, the word coined from the convergence of
cubism, holo as in all information dispersed at every
point and quabbalistics, is the study of the Creator's
Original Design Science.
HoloQubismare explorations into the form of Principle Itself
revealing the Original Oscillations of Creative Potency. This is in clear
distinction with frequency and vibration that are in the realm of
time-space-matter while Oscillations are substrate to the hyperdimensional causal realm.
These Qubistic pieces are evolved using principles of evolution
rather that simply designed and as such have holographic and fractal properties.
This emergence reveals special non-lineal fields of space and frame. What the
viewer sees are not forms but principle itself.
I use a freely mixed media approach of paints, inks,
pencil, collage computer algorithmics whereby these
presences undergo tens to hundreds of generations of transformations as they
mature as a life-formulation.
Supersymmetry Complexity Space expressing the physics of dimensionality
exist across scall and as such is able to embody through hyper-information or
syntropic information fields large scales of energy..
Supersymmetry Complexity Space, can reveal how life
emerges from space as space is without dimensional limit. It is how we scale the
energy and information that determines the dimensional parameters.
It is through radical symmetry that the lineral and non-linear have
realtionship, the basic bosons and fermions of quantum
mechanics
Without supersymmetry, one would expect any two point of the plane of
the picture to be unrelated. But with supersymmetry complexity, properties
like mass appear and the interactive strength between a particle and its
supersymmetric partner are closely aligned.
It would imply for an electron, for example, the existence of a corresponding
superparticle-called a selectron, in this case-with the same mass and charge.
There was and still is a big hope that we will find signatures of supersymmetry
in the next generation of colliders. Density of supersymetric information
manifests real energy and further a real appearance of mass through the
supersymetric complexity space expressed through the plane of the picture.
The realization of supersymmetry is an extension of symmetries
associated with space and time.. Supersymmetry is right at the root of the
string of dimensions that define every point of existence. Super-intelligent
pure potential.
Supersymmetry when it breaks produces according to the
nature of the roots of the supersymetry complexity space a myriad of unique
space-like regions - particles.
Hyper dimensionality provide a means to express the
nature of primodial existence.
The form is not fundamental but are
oscillations of a fundamental super-harmonic.
Each artwork is or can evolve through a fractal
contuumization of itself. So the art is itself.
Supersymetry Complexity space explain how evolutionary
order can emerge out of any kind of choas. Life is inherently encoded to appear
everywhere! Psychisist are searching fore the extra dimensions without realizing
that they exist inherently in the very nature of space across
scale
Dimensions answer the unsolved problem of
three-dimensional appearance of complexity and form and life? When space as
supersymtrey braks symetry then the infinite but unexpressed shows it creative
potential through the multiplication geometrically of interactive relationship.
Breaking space shifts unity to interdependence, the nature of consciousness
itself.
The fact that we see only three spatial dimensions
doesn't necessarily mean that only three exist, and Einstein's general
relativity doesn't treat a three-dimensional universe preferentially.
There are many unseen ingredients to the universe.
We do not include the extra dimensions because we have not known what to look
for even though it has exists as a hints in all great classical arts incuding
indigeousness, Since we are consciusnessly polarized to identify with the
threeand somewhat 4 dimensions we seldom reflect on the possible exiostenc eof
an endless number of dimensions encoded in the nature of space itself. How are
they encoded? Through a network of lower dimensional object expressed through a
higher dimensional space. The art creates such an object as the visual
projective through the plane of the art of a higher dimensional space. Forms
manifexting are confined to the projected spacial field.
Branes allow for an entirely new set of possibilities in
the physics of extra dimensions, because particles confined to the brane would
look more or less as they would in a three-plus-one-dimension world; they never
venture beyond it. Protons, electrons, quarks, all sorts of fundamental
particles could be stuck on the brane. In that case, you may wonder why we
should care about extra dimensions at all, since despite their existence the
particles that make up our world do not traverse them. However, although all
known standard-model particles stick to the brane, this is not true of gravity.
The mechanisms for confining particles and forces mediated by the photon or
electrogauge proton to the brane do not apply to gravity. Gravity, according to
the theory of general relativity, must necessarily exist in the full geometry of
space. Furthermore, a consistent gravitational theory requires that the
graviton, the particle that mediates gravity, has to couple to any source of
energy, whether that source is confined to the brane or not. Therefore, the
graviton would also have to be out there in the region encompassing the full
geometry of higher dimensions-a region known as the bulk-because there might be
sources of energy there. Finally, there is a string-theory explanation of why
the graviton is not stuck to any brane: The graviton is associated with the
closed string, and only open strings can be anchored to a brane.
A scenario in which particles are confined to a brane
and only gravity is sensitive to the additional dimensions permits extra
dimensions that are considerably larger than previously thought. The reason is
that gravity is not nearly as well tested as other forces, and if it is only
gravity that experiences extra dimensions, the constraints are much more
permissive. We haven't studied gravity as well as we've studied most other
particles, because it's an extremely weak force and therefore more difficult to
precisely test. Physicists have showed that even dimensions almost as big as a
millimeter would be permitted, if it were only gravity out in the
higher-dimensional bulk. This size is huge compared with the scales we've been
talking about. It is a macroscopic, visible size! But because photons (which we
see with) are stuck to the brane, too, the dimensions would not be visible to
us, at least in the conventional ways.
Once branes are included in the picture, you can start
talking about crazily large extra dimensions. If the extra dimensions are very
large, that might explain why gravity is so weak. (Gravity might not seem weak
to you, but it's the entire earth that's pulling you down; the result of
coupling an individual graviton to an individual particle is quite small. From
the point of view of particle physics, which looks at the interactions of
individual particles, gravity is an extremely weak force.) This weakness of
gravity is a reformulation of the so-called hierarchy problem-that is, why the
huge Planck mass suppressing gravitational interactions is sixteen orders of
magnitude bigger than the mass associated with particles we see. But if gravity
is spread out over large extra dimensions, its force would indeed be diluted.
The gravitational field would spread out in the extra dimensions and
consequently be very weak on the brane-an idea recently proposed by theorists
Nima Arkani Hamed, Savas Dimopoulos, and Gia Dvali. The problem with this
scenario is the difficulty of explaining why the dimensions should be so large.
The problem of the large ratio of masses is transmuted into the problem of the
large size of curled-up dimensions.
Raman Sundrum, currently at Johns Hopkins University,
and I recognized that a more natural explanation for the weakness of gravity
could be the direct result of the gravitational attraction associated with the
brane itself. In addition to trapping particles, branes carry energy. We showed
that from the perspective of general relativity this means that the brane curves
the space around it, changing gravity in its vicinity. When the energy in space
is correlated with the energy on the brane so that a large flat
three-dimensional brane sits in the higher-dimensional space, the graviton (the
particle communicating the gravitational force) is highly attracted to the
brane. Rather than spreading uniformly in an extra dimension, gravity stays
localized, very close to the brane.
The high concentration of the graviton near the
brane-let's call the brane where gravity is localized the Planck brane-leads to
a natural solution to the hierarchy problem in a universe with two branes. For
the particular geometry that solves Einstein's equations, when you go out some
distance in an extra dimension, you see an exponentially suppressed
gravitational force. This is remarkable because it means that a huge separation
of mass scales-sixteen orders of magnitude-can result from a relatively modest
separation of branes. If we are living on the second brane (not the Planck
brane), we would find that gravity was very weak. Such a moderate distance
between branes is not difficult to achieve and is many orders of magnitude
smaller than that necessary for the large-extra-dimensions scenario just
discussed. A localized graviton plus a second brane separated from the brane on
which the standard model of particle physics is housed provides a natural
solution to the hierarchy problem-the problem of why gravity is so incredibly
weak. The strength of gravity depends on location, and away from the Planck
brane it is exponentially suppressed.
This theory has exciting experimental implications,
since it applies to a particle physics scale-namely, the TeV scale. In this
theory's highly curved geometry, Kaluza-Klein particles-those particles with
momentum in the extra dimensions-would have mass of about a TeV; thus there is a
real possibility of producing them at colliders in the near future. They would
be created like any other particle and they would decay in much the same way.
Experiments could then look at their decay products and reconstruct the mass and
spin that is their distinguishing property. The graviton is the only particle we
know about that has spin 2. The many Kaluza-Klein particles associated with the
graviton would also have spin 2 and could therefore be readily identified.
Observation of these particles would be strong evidence of the existence of
additional dimensions and would suggest that this theory is
correct.
As exciting as this explanation of the existence of very
different mass scales is, Raman and I discovered something perhaps even more
surprising. Conventionally, it was thought that extra dimensions must be curled
up or bounded between two branes, or else we would observe higher-dimensional
gravity. The aforementioned second brane appeared to serve two purposes: It
explained the hierarchy problem because of the small probability for the
graviton to be there, and it was also responsible for bounding the extra
dimension so that at long distances (bigger than the dimension's size) only
three dimensions are seen.
The concentration of the graviton near the Planck brane
can, however, have an entirely different implication. If we forget the hierarchy
problem for the moment, the second brane is unnecessary! That is, even if there
is an infinite extra dimension and we live on the Planck brane in this infinite
dimension, we wouldn't know about it. In this "warped geometry," as the space
with exponentially decreasing graviton amplitude is known, we would see things
as if this dimension did not exist and the world were only
three-dimensional.
Because the graviton has such a small probability of
being located away from the Planck brane, anything going on far away from the
Planck brane should be irrelevant to physics on or near it. The physics far away
is in fact so entirely irrelevant that the extra dimension can be infinite, with
absolutely no problem from a three-dimensional vantage point. Because the
graviton makes only infrequent excursions into the bulk, a second brane or a
curled-up dimension isn't necessary to get a theory that describes our
three-dimensional world, as had previously been thought. We might live on the
Planck brane and address the hierarchy problem in some other manner-or we might
live on a second brane out in the bulk, but this brane would not be the boundary
of the now infinite space. It doesn't matter that the graviton occasionally
leaks away from the Planck brane; it's so highly localized there that the Planck
brane essentially mimics a world of three dimensions, as though an extra
dimension didn't exist at all. A four-spatial-dimensions world, say, would look
almost identical to one with three spatial dimensions. Thus all the evidence we
have for three spatial dimensions could equally well be evidence for a theory in
which there are four spatial dimensions of infinite extent.
It's an exciting but frustrating game. We used to think
the easiest thing to rule out would be large extra dimensions, because large
extra dimensions would be associated with low energies, which are more readily
accessible. Now, however, because of the curvature of space, there is a theory
permitting an infinite fourth dimension of space in a configuration that so
closely mimics three dimensions that the two worlds are virtually
indistinguishable.
If there are differences, they will be subtle. It might
turn out that black holes in the two worlds would behave differently. Energy can
leak off the brane, so when a black hole decays it might spit out particles into
the extra dimension and thus decay much more quickly. Physicists are now doing
some interesting work on what black holes would look like if this
extra-dimensional theory with the highly concentrated graviton on the brane is
true; however, initial inquiries suggest that black holes, like everything else,
would look too similar to distinguish the four- and three dimensional theories.
With extra dimensions, there are an enormous number of possibilities for the
overall structure of space. There can be different numbers of dimensions and
there might be arbitrary numbers of branes contained within. Branes don't even
all have to be three-plus-one-dimensional; maybe there are other dimensions of
branes in addition to those that look like ours and are parallel to ours. This
presents an interesting question about the global structure of space, since how
space evolves with time would be different in the context of the presence of
many branes. It's possible that there are all sorts of forces and particles we
don't know about that are concentrated on branes and can affect cosmology.
In the above example, physics everywhere-on the brane
and in the bulk-looks three-dimensional. Even away from the Planck brane,
physics appears to be three dimensional, albeit with weaker gravitational
coupling. Working with Andreas Karch (now at the University of Washington), I
discovered an even more amazing possibility: Not only can there be an infinite
extra dimension but physics in different locations can reflect different
dimensionality. Gravity is localized near us in such a way that it's only the
region near us that looks three-dimensional; regions far away reflect a
higher-dimensional space. It may be that we see three spatial dimensions not
because there really are only three spatial dimensions but because we're stuck
to this brane and gravity is concentrated near it, while the surrounding space
is oblivious to our lower-dimensional island. There are also some possibilities
that matter can move in and out of this isolated four-dimensional region,
seeming to appear and disappear as it enters and leaves our domain. These are
very hard phenomena to detect in practice, but theoretically there are all sorts
of interesting questions about how such a construct all fits
together.
We've used the basic
elements found in string theory-namely, the existence of branes and extra
dimensions-but we would really like to know if there is a true brane
construction. Could you take the very specific branes given by string theory and
produce a universe with a brane that localizes gravity? Whether you can actually
derive this from string theory or some more fundamental theory is important. The
fact that we haven't done it yet isn't evidence that it's not true, and Andreas
and I have made good headway into realizing our scenario in string theory. But
it can be very, very hard to solve these complicated geometrical set-ups. In
general, the problems that get solved, although they seem very complicated, are
in many ways simple problems. There is much more work to be done; exciting
discoveries await, and they will have implications for other fields.
Does it really have a new mechanism in
it? In some sense, the cyclic idea still uses inflation to smooth out the
universe. Sometimes it's almost too easy to come up with theories. What grounds
your theories? What ties them down? What restricts you from just doing anything?
Is there really a new idea there? Do we really have a new mechanism at work?
Does it connect to some other, more fundamental theoretical idea? Does it help
make that work? Recently I have been exploring the implications of extra
dimensions for cosmology. It seems that inflation with extra dimensions works
even better than without! What's so nice about this theory is that one can
reliably calculate the effect of the extra dimension; no ad hoc assumptions are
required. Furthermore, the theory has definite implications for cosmology
experiments. All along, I've been emphasizing what we actually see. It's my hope
that time and experiments will distinguishamong the
possibilities
.