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Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical world is made of information with energy and matter as incidentals John A. Wheeler
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Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Page 1: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

Physical World as an Internet of Things

Simon BerkovichThe George Washington UniversityWashington, DC 20052

Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC

The physical world is made of informationwith energy and matter as incidentals John A. Wheeler

Page 2: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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A new methodological tool: Internet of Things and Cloud Computing

Synergetics –activities to withstand entropy increase Stored program concept in distributed implementation

IoT: Wonderful technology

Powerful constructive approach

Bertrand RussellThe method of “postulating” what we want has many advantages; they are the same as the advantages of theft over honest toil

Page 3: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Technology of today is science of tomorrowTechnology of today is science of tomorrow

1. Technology shape fundamental knowledge 2. The Big Picture of Nature of modern science is incorrect3. Advancements of our society are essentially technological

Lord Kelvin:: "The steam engine has given more to science than science has given to the steam engine"

Mechanical Universe – Electrical Universe – High-Tech Universe

Page 4: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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“In the time of crisis philosophy becomes an applied science” V.S.Stepin good for available practices --- prevent further progress

Agriculture

Industrialization

High-Tech

Navigation

Cosmonautics

Sustainability

Flat Earth

Earth centric

Modern cosmology

Page 5: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Quantum mechanics applies to things of all sizes: birds, plants, may be even people V. Vedral, “Living in a quantum world”, Scientific American, pp. 38-43, June 2011

Three key points addressed by the IoT model:

(1) Nonlocality of the Universe The quintessential quantum effect

(2) Morphogenesis of organisms Involves tremendous amounts of information

(3) Biochemical motility Hot-clocking effect --- new source of

energy

Page 6: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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RADICAL PARADIGM SHIFT: “B-B” “I-I”How the physical IoT is implemented? --- cellular automaton

“Billiard-Ball”

“Informational-Infrastructure”

Page 7: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Cellular Automaton EThER InfraStructure (CAETERIS):physics is a study of rich consequences of mutual synchronization

Local geometry ─ 3D lattice

Global geometry ─ Hypersurface of 4D sphere

)2 (mod 33

221

DDDbt

Transformational rule ─ distributed fault-tolerant synchronization Equation for the phase of circular counters :

Complementary condition: discretization of phase changes Dimensionless parameters (artifacts of the design): α=1/137 and ε ~1040 Two classes of solutions: "slow" spiral waves and "fast" diffusion spread Two global periodic cycles: matter formation and diffusional wave trainsThe origin of non-locality --- establishment of a holographic mechanism

Page 8: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Basic publicationsSIMON Y. BERKOVICH

MUTUAL SYNCHRONIZATION INA NETWORK OF DIGITAL CLOCKS

AS THE KEY CELLULAR AUTOMATON MECHANISM OF NATURE

COMPUTATIONAL MODEL OF FUNDAMENTAL PHYSICS

SYNOPSIS, Rockville, 1986

Russian translation

Moscow University Press, 1993http://www.chronos.msu.ru/RREPORTS/berkovich_avtomaty.pdf

Оn the “Barcode” Functionality of DNA, or the Phenomenon of Life in the Physical Universe Dorrance Publishing Co, Inc, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 2003

With the “barcode” interpretation of DNA, zillions of biological objects can be seen as a population of users on the “Internet of the physical Universe.” The author responds to two perplexing questions: “How can an organism be built from an information-deficient genome?” and “Why do more complex organisms have less complex genomes?”The striking difference between dead and living matter lies in the intensity of the involvement of the informational infrastructure of the physical world. The problem of the organization of Life is treated with the methodology of computer engineering design.

University Readers, Inc. 2009

Constructive Approach to Fundamental Science: Selective Writings by Simon Berkovich and Hanan Al Shargi

Presents the idea of a holographic construction of the Universehttp://www.universityreaders.com/titles/berkovich/http://www.bestthinking.com/topics/science/physics/quantum_physics/a-comprehensive-explanation-of-quantum-mechanics

Page 9: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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High-Tech Construction of High-Tech Construction of Nature:Nature:

cellular automaton mechanismT h e E q u a t i o n o f t h e U n i v e r s e

...221

DDb

t( m o d 2 π )

T w o c l a s s e s o f s o l u t i o n s i n d i f f e r e n t t i m e s c a l e s :

M A T E R I A L a n d I N F O R M A T I O N A LI N F O R M A T I O N A L

• h e l i c o i d a l s o l i t o n s – e l e m e n t a r y p a r t i c l e s 1 / 1 3 7

• d i f f u s i o n a l s p r e a d – “ a c t i o n - a t - t h e - d i s t a n c e ” 1 0 4 0

T h e E q u a t i o n o f t h e U n i v e r s e

...221

DDb

t( m o d 2 π )

A r t i f a c t s o f t h e d e s i g n α = 1 / 1 3 7 a n d ε = 1 0 4 0

C o r r e s p o n d i n g s o l u t i o n s i n d i f f e r e n t t i m e s c a l e s :

M A T E R I A L a n d I N F O R M A T I O N A L

• h e l i c o i d a l s o l i t o n s – f u l l s p e c t r u m o f s t a t i o n a r y e l e m e n t a r y p a r t i c l e s

• d i f f u s i o n a l s p r e a d – “ a c t i o n - a t - t h e - d i s t a n c e ” , h o l o g r a p h i c m e c h a n i s m

Isaac Newton’s “Sensorium of God”Isaac Newton’s “Sensorium of God”

Absolute space with relativistic properties

3D surface of 4D hypersphere

WorkingWorkingfrequencyfrequency10101111 Hz Hz

Page 11: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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(1) Unbelievable nonlocality

tea

or

coffee

tea

or

coffee

Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen Paradox

In the opinion of A. Einstein, quantum entanglement is a flagrant absurd, if correct, “it signifies the end of physics as a science”

Primary property --- non-signaling correlations: communication through common memory rather than by message passing

Page 12: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Shaping the Holographic Universe

The requisite holographic componentry derives on top of the cellular automaton mechanism:

(1) source of reference wave trains (2) splitting these waves for coherent interference (3) recording medium in a dynamic layer form (4) reconstructing beam

Popular appeal to the Holographic Universe refers back to D. Bohm,yet realization of holography is an intricate technical problem

Shared content-addressable holographic storage

Page 13: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Indicative effects

CMB front

(2) Dipole Anisotropy:Eccentric positioning with respect to the reference holographic beam

Recording

Memory of past events withcontent-addressable access

Reconstruction conjugate beamProduces hot-spot feedbacks

Returning hot-spots

Elementary eventReference beam ofdiffusion wave-trains

(1) Nonlocality:Processing holographic slices as a whole

Page 14: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Continuous Reading-Writing in Holographic Memory

WriteWrite pointergenerating the main CMB

Empty storage

Accumulated information

Content-addressable access

ReadoutReadout process producingphysical noise

Concomitant material influxes (cosmic rays, background neutrions, radio waves, gamma-rays, gravity fluctuations) out of nowhere --- from readout and content decay of Holographic Memory

Page 15: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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“DIGITAL LIFE” OF THE UNIVERSE IoT: every event is recorded at a strobe frequency 1011 Hz

INFORMATIONAL CAPACITY: --- 10102 - 10110 BITS

Non-identifiable particles --- 1080

(quantum mechanics) Identifiable macromolecules --- 1033

(biochemistry)

Throughput of recording --- 1080 BITS/SEC

Bit_Fixation_Flow_Earth --- 1050 BITS/SEC Bit_Fixation_Flow_Biomass --- 1040 BITS/SEC

Mental activity of a human generation --- 1030 BITS

CLOCK RATE --- 10 11 Hz

Page 16: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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(2) Biological cloud computing – reference architecture

QA 164 .N58

Using DNA macromoleculesfor creating brain-like unrestrained holographiccontent-addressable memory

)!(!!

rnrn

n

r

Σ ∫ ∂ 60%

10%

∩ 20%

♫ 0%

DNA is an identification code, like a call number

responsible forBiological individuality of DNAensures unique access

Page 17: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Complexity is in encoding, not in hardware

″1″ ″0″ ″1″ ″1″

1010 0000 1010 1010

Physical and logical bits

User A: ″1″ - 1100User B: ″1″ - 1010User C: ″1″ - 1001Zero-bit: ″0″ - 0000

example of an access pattern for user B

Sharing associative processing with orthogonal coding

Page 18: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Human memory: the central phenomenon of NatureHuman memory: the central phenomenon of Nature

• Recording is mandatory and continuous• Free unlimited capacity • Permanent and non-erasable • Continuing replication of data• Total associative search • Penfield’s movies

“Camcorder” organization, shared wireless access, stream processing on common storage, PageRank-type selection

1011Hz

Page 19: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Google and the brain: holistic element selection

∙∙∙

query

responseGoogleSearchPageRank

“I’m Feeling Lucky”

1011 iterations/sec

random walks

eigenvalueof quantum

measurement

Page 20: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Comparison of Computational Models

Feature

Model

Memoryaccess

Volumerestrictionsand updates

Control flow

Dimensionalityof data slices

Turing machine

sequential

∞ erasable

transition diagram

0D - symbols

Von Neumann computer random

address space erasable

list of instructions

1D - machine words

Associative processing - select unique element

content- addressable

code capacitynon-erasable

modificationof searching

2D - holographic cross-sections

Page 21: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Activities in the brain are distributed

Page 22: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Assemblage of bits in glia

Interface between the storage in Holographic Memory and processing by Neuronal Circuitry is provided by 2D spots of Glial Cells

◙ ◙ ◙ ◙ ◙◙ ◙ ◙

Compare to 1D machine words --- 32 bits, 64 bits

How to achieve high performance with slow processing elements?

Localized center interfacing brain operations --- IoT solution“The way in which minds are attached to bodies is

beyond man’s understanding” (St. Augustine, V century)

Page 23: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Scheme of localized brain activities with remote accessbrain activities with remote access

Neuronal CircuitryCONNECTIONS

Glia Cells INTERFACE

 Holographic

MemorySHARED

 

TRANSFORMincremental

SLOW processing FAST data streaming

READ PHASE CONJUGATE

CHEMICAL SIGNALING

R W R W R W R W R W R W R W External clock pulses at 100 GHz ┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼──┼

  Glia signaling – neuron transforming ┼──────────┼──────────┼──────────┼─────────┼

asynchronous

WRITE

5 · 105 bits2D segments

SELECT

Page 24: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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(3) Extention of the “Internet” approach ---

combining control and actuation

Figuratively speaking, energy comes from “USB port” of quantum computer of the Universe

“Hot-clocking” effect in the Holographic Universe is a source of energy

Page 25: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Biochemical motility

Albert Szent-György:

The more data we collect regarding muscle the less we understand its functions. Here we have approached a chasm going through the whole medicine and biology

Pyotr Kapitsa:

The most surprising thing, we have to confess, is that until now scientists have not understood the essence of the muscle process

Page 26: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Food and energyA bumblebee can travel 2,000 miles on the energy found in one teaspoon of nectar--but each flower supplies only enough to keep the bee going for one minute. So they must feed all day, stopping at over 100 flowers on each trip from the nest.

Some beetles would need daily intake of food twice their own mass

The common view is that organisms feed upon energyMenu in some restaurants indicate energy content of every dish“Needless to say, taken literally, this is just an absurd” E. Schrödinger, “What is Life”, The Physical Aspect of the Living Cell

Feeding is “maintenance”, not ”refueling”

Page 27: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Rough estimate of global capacity of“hot-clocking” energy

“Hot-clocking” origination of biological motility and locomotion

An individual human being dissipates power ~ 100 W

Seven billion humans dissipate power ~ 1 Terawatt

Just about, total energy consumed by all living beings could be around several orders of magnitudes higherSo, it can be comparable with total requirements ofworld economy ~ 20 Terawatts

Hence, energy available from the “hot-clocking” source could be sufficient to satisfy the demands of human civilization - this opportunity seems unique

Page 28: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Scheme of “energy teleportation” by Masahiro Hotta

“Energy-Entanglement Relation for Quantum Energy Teleportation”, http://arxiv.org/abs/1002.0200

“Entangled mechanical oscillators”

Nature, 459, pp. 683-685, June 4, 2009, Letters to Editor

Distant transfer of impact

Page 29: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Suggested scheme of energy generation by parametric resonance teleportation

EA

EB

1011 Hz

Modulating B A

Using Quantum Non-locality for Generation of PRIME Energy: Parametric Resonance In Motion Entanglement

http://www.bestthinking.com/topics/science/physics/using-quantum-non-locality-for-generation-of-prime-energy-parametric-resonance-in-motion- entanglement?tab=references

Page 30: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Parametric resonance --- a generic tool applicable to various physical phenomena

 

d2x /dt2 + β(t)·dx /dt + ω2(t)·x = 0

U(t)

Forced Parametric oscillations oscillations

LC tank

May extract “hot-clocking” impetuses from a lower level and concentrate outputs of motion at a higher level

Page 31: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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A scheme for an engine using PRIME energy ---“artificial muscle” approach

1011 Hz controlExternal orAutoparametric

To crankshaft

Cylinder

Piston

Working “muscle”

Accumulating “muscle”

Page 32: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Unidentified appearances of energy

“Cold fusion”commercialization!? *)

Sonoluminescence

Ball lightning

Some peculiar phenomena seem to produce excessive amounts of energy: “hot-clocking” may be suspected as a source

*) http://www.nyteknik.se/nyheter/energi_miljo/energi/article3179019.ece

Page 33: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Experimentum Crucis: IoT effects

Electromagnetic cancer

Decades of research have brought inconclusive results

Seeing with the tongue

Testing the surmised “wireless” access to human memory

Biological hacking

Creating a clone can shorten donor’s life

The observed effects may be due to wire-object positioning

How can magnetic field produce cancer?

Page 34: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Cell phone maneuverings ---avoiding possible adverse health effects

Stay away from cell phone-head alignment with the direction of global motion of theSolar System towards the Virgo Cluster

Page 35: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Cosmic habituation: “decline effect”The Truth Wears Off, New Yorker, Dec.13, 2010, by Jonah Lehrer http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2010/12/13/101213fa_fact_lehrer#ixzz1MnlqGlVY

Many results that are rigorously proved and accepted start shrinking in later studies

Something strange was happening: the therapeutic power of the drugs appeared to be steadily waning.

A recent study showed an effect that was less than half of that documented in the first trials.

In the field of medicine, the phenomenon seems extremely widespread.

Page 36: Physical World as an Internet of Things Simon Berkovich The George Washington University Washington, DC 20052 Monday, May 23, 2011 Washington, DC The physical.

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Summarizing remarks:“Internet of things” as a methodological tool for fundamental science

1. The Big Picture of Nature by modern science is essentially wrong --- queer ad hoc patches and insufficient explanatory power (e.g., persistent non-discovery of gravitational waves) The existing paradigm is incapable to account for NONLOCALITY

2. Physical world appears as an “Internet of Things” --- continuous supply of CONTROL AND ACTUATION for dead and living matter: • quantum mechanics behavior is an outcome of Interactive Holography

• biological information processing is Cloud Computing • biological motility arises from “Hot-Clocking” of holography

3. The driving clock of the Cellular Automaton Universe constitutes the ultimate cause of all material movements Employing HOT-CLOCKING EFFECT might present a unique opportunity for obtaining ample amounts of clean energy