Unification theory with no extra dimensions. The first part unifies the strong nuclear force with the gravitational force in a mathematical way; the quantum vacuum is treated as a deformable system by the strong nuclear force. The second part unifies the nuclear force with the quantum vacuum in a hypothetical structure; the quantum vacuum is treated as a supersymmetric and metastable system with properties related to the different types of particles’ motion.
E. Lee, and A. Sangiovanni-Vincentelli. Computer-Aided Design of Integrated Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on, 17 (12):
1217-1229(December 1998)
J. Puzicha, T. Hofmann, and J. Buhmann. Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, 1997. Proceedings., 1997
IEEE Computer Society Conf. on, page 267--272. (1997)
M. de Miguel. Proceedings of the Eighth International Workshop on Object-Oriented Real-Time Dependable Systems, 2003., page 210--216. IEEE, (January 2003)
C. Teyssie. International Conference on Networking, International Conference on Systems and International Conference on Mobile Communications and Learning Technologies, 2006. ICN/ICONS/MCL 2006, page 12-- 12. IEEE, (April 2006)