• ALL THINGS ARE TRIUNE, WITH BINARY INTER-ACTIVES.
  • Why is neutron a neutral particle in spite of having 2 up quarks and 1 down quark? - Quora
  • The mystery of particle generations | symmetry magazine
  • Particle mass has three generations. All visible matter in the universe comes from the first generation of matter particles. Second and third-generation particles are unstable and quickly decay into first-generation particles.
  • What is the Big Bang Theory?
  • There are three levels of physics: fundamental, quantum, and classic. Three are one; one is three; everything else is two.
  • The universe we live in is information-driven. It simulates reality.
  • Our universe was born from the information file that was transcribed upon the fundamental level of physics’ hard drive. It triggered the Big Bang. Immediately after the Big Bang, the operational phase started up. Our universe was growing up. The matter in the universe is simply a product of the inscribed information.
  • This transcribed information got us here today.
  • The universe’s exit strategy, of course, is also in place.
  • Each spacetime particle dynamically develops its next state from the current ones. It sources its information from the hard drive at the fundamental level.
  • Information is the foundation of the universe. It emanates from the fundamental level of physics. It is the blueprint for reality and the operating instructions for this universe, from start to finish. Information is slowly changing scientific inquiry. Materialism is just a part of the equation.
      • WE ARE A DATA-DRIVEN UNIVERSE:
  • Every elementary particle carries encoded data. Information is the fifth state of matter (solid, liquid, gas, plasma, and code). Embedded, coded information drives the laws of physics. The universe is a physical system that contains and processes information.
  • Information and space are gridlike and discrete. They compose the spacetime matrix of an interwoven network of spacetime particles.
  • The three primary subatomic particles that form an atom are protons, neutrons, and electrons.
  • The 12 elementary particles of matter are six quarks (up, charm, top, Down, Strange, Bottom), 3 electrons (electron, muon, tau), and three neutrinos.
  • SOME EXAMPLES OF PROGRAMMED PARTICLES:
  •  These four particles do the build-out of everything: the up and down quarks, the electron, and the electron neutrino.
  • THE QUARK FAMILY:
    • Quarks - Experimental Particle Physics – Syracuse University
      • These programmed workers have many tasks.
    • However, three valence quarks account for only a fraction of a proton’s mass. A proton is in a sea of quarks, antiquarks, and gluons that pop in and out of existence in a flash.
    • There are billions of quarks inside protons and neutrons. They pair all but three with an antiquark. This means only three of them are valence quarks that are held together with gluons. The non-valance quarks just come and go. Valance quarks move around a proton and a neutron at the speed of light.