About me


For information about my career and education, check my Linkedin profile.

My book, and the new radiation theory, were established autodidactically. I only became interested in physics two years after graduating. I was 25 years old and then (2001) began studying various topics. In general I wanted to know what the concepts of time, space and energy involve – because they determine everything – and what the relationship is between them. I eventually realised – a fact which I found disappointing – that these concepts are usually only expressed metaphysically, much like philosophy. In physics, concepts such as time are mainly used in a practical way. Time is then just defined as a tool in order to describe experimental results. But what is time itself, in a concrete sense?

For example, Newton’s concept of ‘absolute time and space’ is the basis of his most important works, and hence of classical physics. However, it is only explained in words. An exact definition – in which the physical properties of ‘absolute simultaneity’ and ‘a strict separation between time and space’ are made explicit in a coherent way – is missing from the world of physics. The same goes for the relativistic notion that time does not elapse equally fast for different observers: merely the extent to which time is dilated can be calculated, but there is no conceptual understanding of it.

My book provides answers to these and to other related problems.