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alliedacademies.comYEARS
Analytical Chemistry 2018
Journal of Chemical Technology and Applications
|
Volume 2
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
International Conference on
Edward H Jimenez et al., J Chem Tech App 2018, Volume 2
THE EFFECT OF GRAVITATIONAL WAVES
AND DARK MATTER IN DAILY LIFE
Edward H Jimenez
1
, Nicolas Recalde
2
and
Esteban Jimenez Ch
3
1
Central University of Ecuador, Ecuador
2
South Carolina University, USA
3
Paul Sabatier University, France
D
ark matter interacts with baryonic matter through gravitational force and
weak force. There are reasons to believe it does not interact directly with
the strong nuclear force. Moreover, if dark matter is hidden in the nuclear sur-
face, then it can be detected through a variation of the effective K-edge cross
section. On the contrary, if it is hidden inside the nuclear core, then it must
produce a variation of the nuclear viscosity. The Femtoscope and low-ener-
gy x-ray spectroscopy allow us to measure the K-edge resonance and, at the
same time, the absence or not of dark matter.
We present two methods on the use of K-edge XANES spectroscopy for or-
ganic and inorganic compounds, one theoretical and one experimental. We
can determine the absence or not of dark matter in the atomic nucleus, es-
sentially in Phosphorus, Xenon, Thulium and Chromium. The algorithms are
sufficiently manageable. This allows us to illustrate that our experimental
arrangement is in agreement with underground laboratories providing direct
detection experiments such as SNOLAB, Gran Sasso, Canfranc, Deep Under-
ground Science and Engineering Laboratory and the China Jinping Under-
ground Laboratory.
On the other hand, after processing the information of 12000 cancer patients,
who have received doses of radiation with energies of the order of 6 MeV, we
review all the treatment protocols before an irradiation. We have detected in a
single file, recorded in radiography and digital information, where a part of the
LINAC moved at a speed close to light in a vacuum, indicating a possible exis-
tence of gravitational waves. The coefficient ΔL / L = 0.00005, is higher than
the value measured on 2017 by Nobel Prize in physics, which is ΔL / L = 10
-18
.
Edward H Jimenez has a PhD in Applied Mathematics
from the University of Saint Etienne in France, his Bach-
elor is in Nuclear Physics and his masters are in Game
Theory and Artificial Intelligence. Currently, he is a profes-
sor at the Central University of Ecuador in the Faculty of
Chemical Engineering, and has worked for 19 years in the
oil industry in the area of catalysis and nanotechnology
of Si / Al / P using x-ray spectroscopy. He has published
more than 20 papers with referee and 6 books of high
impact in Ecuador. Nicolas Recalde, has worked for 15
years in cancer radiotherapy at Georgetown University
Medical Center and Inova Health System, USA. He was
Chief Medical Physicist at Potomac Radiation Center in
Virginia, USA. He is a diplomate of the American Board of
Radiology and a member of the American Association of
Physicists in Medicine.
Ehjimenez@uce.edu.ecBIOGRAPHY