How many times do I have to tell you? A condensate is not a collection of particles.
What the heck is it then? Where do I find one to play with?
If you want to know the energy of the Higgs condensate relative to the uncondensed phase, you can look it up (to the extent it's constrained) in many places.
Word salad. What is this "Higg's condensate" your talking about? A typical Bose-Einstein condensate is simply a collection of particles moving in concert in a single direction. You've got a magic thing going on in this "condensate" of yours. Define this thing in physical terms and put a few units on those moth formulas for us.
Gravity couples to all forms of energy. If you believe in GR, you have no option.
"Couples" in what physical way? You're making it do magic tricks not just bending space time.
It has an energy density. You could call that a mass density if you choose - but it's a mass density (the total energy depends linearly on the volume), not a mass. If you understand that properly, you'll resolve your confusion.
If it's density depends on volume then a 10 fold increase in volume will lead to a significant decrease in density too. You're not being consistent in this verbal explanation and your math doesn't include a mention of a single unit of measurement, let alone the number of Higgs Bosons per cubic meter.
That's right - but the Higgs condensate is not a Higgs boson. Is that really so difficult for you to understand?
What's difficult to "understand" is what what you mean by the term "condensate". A 'condensate' in physics is simply a collection of particles. Your "condensate" is nothing of the sort evidently, but you refuse to explain what it actually is, or put any units to your math! Come on. This is pure word salad with math salad thrown in for fun.
Learn some basic physics and come back to me.
It's pretty clear you aren't talking "physics" or physical particle here at all. It's pure make believe nonsense as best as I can tell. Where can I pick up one of these magical condensates that retains constant density when I increase the volume? Where can I buy one?
I have no idea what you're talking about. You were the one that asked the question - I'm not trying to "do" anything.
You're trying to tell me that some "condensate" (whatever you mean by that term) maintains constant density over *exponential increases in volume*. That a "extraordinary" claim. I'd like to see some extraordinary evidence and I want to see it work in the real world.
"Kosmologische Betrachtungen zur allgemeinen Relativitätstheorie", A. Einstein, 1917.
Page and quote please.
[QUTOE]I'll ignore the idiotic personal attacks. Einstein came to believe the magnitude of that term should be zero, not that he had made a mistake in the analysis of the physics when it's non-zero. As for that quote, it's highly questionable he ever said any such thing - pure hearsay.[/QUOTE]
Riiiight.
Wrong. As I keep telling you and you keep ignoring, the Higgs has precisely the same property.
You keep claiming this, but you've yet to explain any of it, or put any units to anything. It's impossible to decifer anything you've written to this point in time. How about adding some units to your math so I have some hope of grasping what you mean?
Light is not a condensate. Why is the fact that different things are different so hard for you to grasp?
It's hard to grasp anything related to what you've said or the math you've posted because:
A) not one item has a single unit of measurement included in the description
B) nothing in nature does what you claim so I can't verify any of this.
OK, it's you against me, Einstein, and every physicist alive. You have no math, and can find nothing wrong with mine. All you have are nonsense words.
The only "nonsense" around here is the math you posted that doesn't define a single unit of measurement. Get real.