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As a teenager, I had a high interest in science fiction. I marveled at how the space ships (and flying saucers) could fly around without using primitive rockets (they obviously had mastered gravity). I often wondered why <em>we</em> weren't using flying saucers ourselves.
'''Peter C. M. Hahn''' (born April 18, 1954) is a German-Canadian electronics engineering technologist and independent researcher based in Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada. He is best known for developing "foamy ether" theory, an [[Aether|aether]]-based framework that he presents as a candidate quantum theory of gravity and a "Theory of Everything." Working outside the mainstream physics community, Hahn proposes that space is filled with a single foam-like substance and that all matter and forces are distortions within it.


This put me on a journey of trying to understand what gravity really <em>is</em>. I began reading books on relativity, but each one resulted in disappointment. I was getting tired of the bowling ball distorting a stretched sheet of rubber' analogy. It was becoming painfully apparent that nobody really new what gravity <em>actually is</em>. The mathematics didn't help either. I wanted to know what gravity actually <em>looked like</em> down at the quantum level. This, of course, led me to the world of (A)ether.
==Biography==


Using ether to describe empty space appealed to me, but it didn't seem like there were any successfully developed ether models that could compete with (or replace) relativity. In the late eighties, I had my first flash of intuition where I decided to use <em>'''foamy'''</em><em>''' ether'''</em> to describe empty space. This helped me tremendously in visualizing gravity where massive particles somehow cause distortions in this foamy ether. This model, however, was still unsatisfactory because it still had the universe filled with <em>two</em> substances (particles and foamy ether). It wasn't until the late nineties that I had my second flash of intuition and realized that I could eliminate the particles altogether and replace them all with <em>distortions</em> in the foamy ether. Now the universe contained only one substance (foamy ether) and all the particles in it were mere <em>distortions</em> of the ether. This solved the problem of massive particles having to move <em>through</em> the ether; instead, it was the ether distortion itself that moved.
Hahn developed an early interest in science fiction and in the physics of spaceflight, which led him to question the nature of [[gravity]]. Dissatisfied with the standard analogies used to explain [[General relativity|general relativity]], he turned to the concept of the [[Aether|ether]] as a way of visualizing gravity at the quantum level.


This ether model worked so well for me that I had to share it on a web site. But before I could do that, I had to find some 3D graphics software that would test my foamy ether model and visually demonstrate this to the reader. This is where [http://www.havingasoftware.nl/ ThreeDimSim] came in. This 3D simulation software allowed me to build a working model of foam and use it to demonstrate how forces like gravity and electromagnetism work in the ether.
In 1975 he graduated with honors in Electronics Engineering Technology from the [http://www.nait.ca/ Northern Alberta Institute of Technology] (NAIT). From 1975 to 2009 he worked for [http://consumer.telus.com/cgi-ebs/jsp/homepage.jsp TELUS Communications Inc.] in a variety of roles, including network switch maintenance, fibre optics maintenance, network switching engineering, technology strategy, and web development. He received a Journeyman Certificate as a Communication Electrician in 1979 and a Web Developer Certificate (Programming Option) in 2000. Since 1989 he has been a member of ASET, the Association of Science and Engineering Technology Professionals of Alberta, and holds the Certified Engineering Technologist (C.E.T.) designation.


I invite you to view the site: [http://www3.telus.net/foamyether/ Foamy Ether - A Framework for a Theory Of Everything]
==Work==


1975 - Graduated from [http://www.nait.ca/ Northern Alberta Institute of Technology]: with honors in Electronics Engineering Technology
Hahn traces the origins of his foamy ether concept to the late 1980s, when he proposed using a "foamy" ether to describe empty space as an aid to visualizing gravity, which he pictured as distortions of the foam caused by massive particles. In the late 1990s he further refined the idea by eliminating particles as separate entities, instead treating all particles as distortions within the ether itself, so that the universe is composed of a single substance. According to Hahn, this approach avoids the problem of particles having to move through the ether, because it is the distortion, rather than any material particle, that propagates.


1975 to 2009 - Worked for [http://consumer.telus.com/cgi-ebs/jsp/homepage.jsp TELUS Communications Inc.] in various roles: Network Switch Maintenance, Fibre Optics Maintenance, Network Switching Engineering, Technology Strategy, Web Development.
To illustrate the model, Hahn used 3D simulation software ([http://www.havingasoftware.nl/ ThreeDimSim]) to build working simulations of foam and demonstrate how forces such as gravity and electromagnetism might arise within the ether. In 2005 he posted the article "Foamy Ether — A Framework for a Theory of Everything," and he has continued to develop and publish the framework online.


1979 - Received Journeyman Certificate for: Communication Electrician
==Scientific contributions==


1989 to Present - Member of ASET (The Association of Science and Engineering Technology Professionals of Alberta)
Foamy ether theory holds that a gravitational wave is a rhythmic stretching and compressing of the foamy ether caused by mass in motion, distorting both space and time. A central claim of Hahn's work is that the speed of light varies with the tension of the ether rather than remaining constant, contrary to the postulates of [[Special relativity|special relativity]]. On this basis he argues that interferometer-based [[Gravitational Waves|gravitational-wave]] detectors such as LIGO cannot, in principle, detect gravitational waves, and he has proposed an alternative "time-variance" detector design based on ether inflow.


2000 - Received Web Developer Certificate (Programming Option)
Hahn has also applied the framework to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence ([[SETI]]), suggesting that advanced civilizations might prefer gravitational waves over electromagnetic waves for interstellar communication and that such waves could in principle be modulated to carry intelligent signals. In 2008 he attended the [http://abscicon.seti.org/ AbSciCon 2008] astrobiology conference, where he presented a poster entitled "[http://www3.telus.net/foamyether/seti/seti.htm Searching gravitational waves for intelligent messages]." His later writings have appeared on preprint repositories including [https://vixra.org/ viXra] and in the Foundational Questions Institute (FQXi) essay forum. These proposals lie outside the accepted framework of modern physics, in which the constancy of the speed of light and the interferometric detection of gravitational waves are experimentally well established.
 
2005 - Developed foamy ether theory and posted article "Foamy Ether- A Framework for a Theory of Everything".
 
2008 - Attended the [http://abscicon.seti.org/ AbSciCon 2008] conference and presented a poster entitled "[http://www3.telus.net/foamyether/seti/seti.htm Searching gravitational waves for intelligent messages]".


==Abstracts==
==Abstracts==


* 2012 - "[[The Persistent Failure of a Two Substance Paradigm]]" ([http://www.naturalphilosophy.org/pdf/abstracts/http://www.fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/1407 Read in full])
* 2012 - "[[The Persistent Failure of a Two Substance Paradigm]]" ([http://www.naturalphilosophy.org/pdf/abstracts/http://www.fqxi.org/community/forum/topic/1407 Read in full])
* 2009 - "[[Time Variance Gravitational Wave Detector]]"  
* 2009 - "[[Time Variance Gravitational Wave Detector]]"
* 2008 - "[[Searching Gravitational Waves for Intelligent Messages]]" ([http://www.naturalphilosophy.org/pdf/abstracts/http://www.liebertonline.com/toc/ast/8/2 Read in full])
* 2008 - "[[Searching Gravitational Waves for Intelligent Messages]]" ([http://www.naturalphilosophy.org/pdf/abstracts/http://www.liebertonline.com/toc/ast/8/2 Read in full])
==External links==
* [https://www.peterhahn.ca/ Foamy Ether Theory] — Hahn's official website
* [http://www3.telus.net/foamyether/ Foamy Ether — A Framework for a Theory Of Everything] (original site)


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[[Category:Worldwide List of Dissident Scientists]]

Latest revision as of 15:22, 17 July 2026

Peter C. M. Hahn
Peter C. M. Hahn
Born(1954-04-18)April 18, 1954
ResidenceSherwood Park, Alberta, Canada
NationalityGerman/Canadian
Known forEther, Aether, Gravitational Waves, Gravity, Unification, SETI, Relativity
Scientific career
FieldsElectronics Engineering Technologist

Peter C. M. Hahn (born April 18, 1954) is a German-Canadian electronics engineering technologist and independent researcher based in Sherwood Park, Alberta, Canada. He is best known for developing "foamy ether" theory, an aether-based framework that he presents as a candidate quantum theory of gravity and a "Theory of Everything." Working outside the mainstream physics community, Hahn proposes that space is filled with a single foam-like substance and that all matter and forces are distortions within it.

Biography

Hahn developed an early interest in science fiction and in the physics of spaceflight, which led him to question the nature of gravity. Dissatisfied with the standard analogies used to explain general relativity, he turned to the concept of the ether as a way of visualizing gravity at the quantum level.

In 1975 he graduated with honors in Electronics Engineering Technology from the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology (NAIT). From 1975 to 2009 he worked for TELUS Communications Inc. in a variety of roles, including network switch maintenance, fibre optics maintenance, network switching engineering, technology strategy, and web development. He received a Journeyman Certificate as a Communication Electrician in 1979 and a Web Developer Certificate (Programming Option) in 2000. Since 1989 he has been a member of ASET, the Association of Science and Engineering Technology Professionals of Alberta, and holds the Certified Engineering Technologist (C.E.T.) designation.

Work

Hahn traces the origins of his foamy ether concept to the late 1980s, when he proposed using a "foamy" ether to describe empty space as an aid to visualizing gravity, which he pictured as distortions of the foam caused by massive particles. In the late 1990s he further refined the idea by eliminating particles as separate entities, instead treating all particles as distortions within the ether itself, so that the universe is composed of a single substance. According to Hahn, this approach avoids the problem of particles having to move through the ether, because it is the distortion, rather than any material particle, that propagates.

To illustrate the model, Hahn used 3D simulation software (ThreeDimSim) to build working simulations of foam and demonstrate how forces such as gravity and electromagnetism might arise within the ether. In 2005 he posted the article "Foamy Ether — A Framework for a Theory of Everything," and he has continued to develop and publish the framework online.

Scientific contributions

Foamy ether theory holds that a gravitational wave is a rhythmic stretching and compressing of the foamy ether caused by mass in motion, distorting both space and time. A central claim of Hahn's work is that the speed of light varies with the tension of the ether rather than remaining constant, contrary to the postulates of special relativity. On this basis he argues that interferometer-based gravitational-wave detectors such as LIGO cannot, in principle, detect gravitational waves, and he has proposed an alternative "time-variance" detector design based on ether inflow.

Hahn has also applied the framework to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI), suggesting that advanced civilizations might prefer gravitational waves over electromagnetic waves for interstellar communication and that such waves could in principle be modulated to carry intelligent signals. In 2008 he attended the AbSciCon 2008 astrobiology conference, where he presented a poster entitled "Searching gravitational waves for intelligent messages." His later writings have appeared on preprint repositories including viXra and in the Foundational Questions Institute (FQXi) essay forum. These proposals lie outside the accepted framework of modern physics, in which the constancy of the speed of light and the interferometric detection of gravitational waves are experimentally well established.

Abstracts

External links