Well silly young Andrew, of course anything in the states here is copyrighted as soon as it's written, ...that's the law. So, that being the case you are certainly far from the youngest person to have a copyright.
...I have a patent. You don't. Anyone can easily check online using the search feature at the patent office website. ...I did, and you aren't there.
I don't know that you spent anything. I don't care either. Whatever you think you have, it's not a patent, and you don't have a trademark either, although you could have a trademark if you wanted one, and had the money to pay for it.
I did look at your link and found nothing there of any significance. What you write seems to be nonsense, and unrelated to any science.
Whatever that 'record info' thing is, it's not a legal document of any kind, just more nonsense.
You are just a little boy playing little boy games, pretending to be something you are not.
...I'm a logician, which means I know logic, and can say with certainty that I have proved that your claim is false.
Patents have a number assigned to them, and if you said what your patent number was then everyone could look (in case you spelled your name wrong) and also see that you are telling a big fib.
Your parents must be very ashamed of you. I expect when you grow up you will wish you had never done this. Your future employers will Google you and find that you are not a honest nor a truthful person. ...So will your children and grandchildren and all your friends and relatives.
Wow. Andrew, you are certainly out there. Funny guy!
...I'm pretty sure you don't have the slightest clue about any of this. Oh, and yes you may be certain that I have read Einstein's book on general relativity (more than forty years ago.) The famous equation you quoted is not the theory but just one equation on one page of the book. If you want to, you can Google it and find the entire text available online.
Folks, if you are reading this, take it from me that it's probably a joke Andrew if playing, and if not then he's just delusional.
In a nut shell Einstein realized that time and distance are measured the same (a foot is roughly the same as a nanosecond) and he applied it to geometry (an event has 4 numbers: length width height and time) which in turn was wrapped slightly by mass locally.
While only a few understood it when he wrote it, it's one of the two theories which cover all know phenomena. Modern string theory is sort of the merger of the two.
Einstein's work is spot-on accurate. Seriously accurate to the extent that in nearly a century we have not found any error in it, not even the smallest of error using the most precise of instruments and experiments.
It does not stand alone but is a step in our understanding, built upon the works of others such as Newton. Energy and mass were once though of as fixed, unchangeable, neither created nor destroyed, thus 'conserved' in the total quantity through all time. Einstein's work showed that energy and mass together were conserved, and that energy and mass could be converted from one to another. The famous equation: 'E equals m (times) c squared' allows a person to convert kilograms of mass into Jules of energy, which has indeed been confirmed and is what we refer to as atomic or nuclear energy.
Youngest Person To Register A Theoretical Physics Theory
Well silly young Andrew, of course anything in the states here is copyrighted as soon as it's written, ...that's the law. So, that being the case you are certainly far from the youngest person to have a copyright.
...I have a patent. You don't. Anyone can easily check online using the search feature at the patent office website. ...I did, and you aren't there.
I don't know that you spent anything. I don't care either. Whatever you think you have, it's not a patent, and you don't have a trademark either, although you could have a trademark if you wanted one, and had the money to pay for it.
I did look at your link and found nothing there of any significance. What you write seems to be nonsense, and unrelated to any science.
Whatever that 'record info' thing is, it's not a legal document of any kind, just more nonsense.
You are just a little boy playing little boy games, pretending to be something you are not.
...I'm a logician, which means I know logic, and can say with certainty that I have proved that your claim is false.
Patents have a number assigned to them, and if you said what your patent number was then everyone could look (in case you spelled your name wrong) and also see that you are telling a big fib.
Your parents must be very ashamed of you. I expect when you grow up you will wish you had never done this. Your future employers will Google you and find that you are not a honest nor a truthful person. ...So will your children and grandchildren and all your friends and relatives.
Youngest Person To Register A Theoretical Physics Theory
I checked the patent office and Andrew does not have a patent.
Anyway, theories are not patented, only inventions are.
As Matt said, this guy is just a troll.
Youngest Person To Register A Theoretical Physics Theory
Wow. Andrew, you are certainly out there. Funny guy! ...I'm pretty sure you don't have the slightest clue about any of this. Oh, and yes you may be certain that I have read Einstein's book on general relativity (more than forty years ago.) The famous equation you quoted is not the theory but just one equation on one page of the book. If you want to, you can Google it and find the entire text available online.
Folks, if you are reading this, take it from me that it's probably a joke Andrew if playing, and if not then he's just delusional.
In a nut shell Einstein realized that time and distance are measured the same (a foot is roughly the same as a nanosecond) and he applied it to geometry (an event has 4 numbers: length width height and time) which in turn was wrapped slightly by mass locally.
While only a few understood it when he wrote it, it's one of the two theories which cover all know phenomena. Modern string theory is sort of the merger of the two.
Einstein's work is spot-on accurate. Seriously accurate to the extent that in nearly a century we have not found any error in it, not even the smallest of error using the most precise of instruments and experiments.
It does not stand alone but is a step in our understanding, built upon the works of others such as Newton. Energy and mass were once though of as fixed, unchangeable, neither created nor destroyed, thus 'conserved' in the total quantity through all time. Einstein's work showed that energy and mass together were conserved, and that energy and mass could be converted from one to another. The famous equation: 'E equals m (times) c squared' allows a person to convert kilograms of mass into Jules of energy, which has indeed been confirmed and is what we refer to as atomic or nuclear energy.