As brought out at the recent convention, some confusion has arisen over Larson’s gravitational equation, eq. (2) of the original edition of the Structure of the Physical Universe:
F = mm‘/s² |
(1)
|
The correct expanded version of this equation is
(m × 3.7115 x 10-32) × (m’ × 3.7115 x 10-32)
|
||
F = |
—————————————————
|
(2)
|
1521 × 10-15 × (s/1)²
|
where 3.7115 x 10-32 sec³/cm³ is the value of the natural unit of mass and m and m’ are simply numbers. The number .1521 x 10-15 sec is the natural unit of time. From equation (2), the natural value of the gravitational constant can be determined:
Gn.u.= (3.7115 × 10-32)²/.1521 × 10-15 = 9.0567 x 10-48 |
(3)
|
Thus equation (1) might better be written as
Fn.u = 9.0567 × 10-48 mm’/s² |
(4)
|
where all values are in natural units. The expression for G in equation (3) can be converted to conventional units. First, the cgs system:
Fn.u.sn.u.² | dynes | ||
Gcgs = 9.0567 ×10-48 | ———— | × 109.7 | ——– |
mn.u² | Fn.u |
(.456 x 10-5 cm | mn.u² | |
× | —————— × | —————— |
sn.u² | (.5565 x10-24 g |
= 6.67 x 10-8 dynes cm²/g² |
(5)
|
The MKS system
Fn.usn.u² | N | ||
GMKS = 9.0567 ×10-48 | ———– | 109.7 10-5 | —— |
mn.u² | Fn.u |
(.456 × 10-7 m)² | mn.u² | |
× | —————— × | ——————— |
sn.u² | (.5565 × 10-27 kg)² |
= 6.67 × 10-11 N-m²/kg² |
(6)
|
Both check. The importance of this cannot be overestimated. These equations completely confirm Larson’s identification of all the fundamental units.
Note that if in equation (2), the value 3.7115 × 10-26 sec³/m³ |
is used then the correct time value must be .1521 × 10-3 sec for the denominator (or 1012 units of time).