Tuesday, April 9, 2024

The nameless physics unit of Meter squared per Seconds Squared and the word מקום

Long time with nothing to say. 

 I've been learning physics. There's a unit that comes up often in physics but for some reason hasn't merited to be given a unit name unto itself (as opposed to other units like Joules, Newtons, etc). That unit is meters squared divided by seconds squared (without consideration of mass which would then be the unit of Newtons). 

 It's striking how this nameless unit comes up in many equations of kinetic and even potential energy (note that when equating kinetic energy 1/2mv^2 with potential energy of mgh - the mass cancels out - such that essentially you're working with this namless unit mentioned above). It also comes up in the famous concept of E=mc^2 - the speed of light squared.
 So for the purposes of this writing I'll make up a term for it - let's call it a SPAC (as I'll explain shortly). 


Got me thinking how to think of what this unit represents... The unit of regular acceleration (meters per second squared) represents acceleration in DISTANCE traversed as time progresses. By logic then then this unit of a SPAC - short for "Spacial Acceleration" would represent acceleration of SPACE / SURFACE being covered as time progresses. It's specifically a measure of Meter SQUARED and it's acceleration over time. 


 Now the insight of mine is this. 
The hebrew word of מקום is equivalent to 186 and you arrive at it exactly by taking the square of the letters of יהו"ה! To me this is an amazing insight to delve further into.

 10^2 + 5^2 + 6^2 + 5^2 = 186.


I'm further intrigued to know if there's any significance to the number derived from the "cubing" of the   שם הויה  which yeilds    10^3 + 5^3 + 6^3 + 5^3 = 1,466