User:Storm05/Hyperdimensional physics

Hyperdimensional physics is a form of Pseudoscience theorized in the mid 19th Century. The pseudoscience was based on mathematical and geometric foundations. Unlike conventional physics, Hyperdimensional physics do not follow the scientific method and as a result is not accepted or is ignored by the general scientific community.

History
The term was coined and proposed by Richard C. Hoagland; supported by the work of pseudo-scientific overunity claimant Thomas E. Bearden, he claims to represent the full implementation of James Clerk Maxwell's original 20 quaternion equations, instead of the reduced Maxwell's equations as amended by Oliver Heaviside commonly taught today. These ideas are rejected by the mainstream physics community as unfounded.

A tenet of these views holds that vast amounts of energy originating from dimensions we cannot perceive are available at latitudes 19.5° both south and north on the Sun and every planet in the Solar System. Hoagland points to the colossal volcano, Olympus Mons, on Mars, as the supreme example, in addition to Earth's biggest volcano, Mauna Loa on the island of Hawaii, and the anticyclonic storm on Jupiter. Olympus Mons is centered at approximately 18.65°N 226.2°E, and the massive shield spans from 13.48°N to 23.68°N and from 220.76°E to 232.2°E. Jupiter's Great Red Spot is centered at 22.0°S. According to Hoagland, an essential prediction of his theory is that a massive planet is yet to be discovered in the Solar System. To date, no research conducted in mainstream astronomy would appear to substantiate these theories. Data analyzed from the WISE all-sky infrared survey, fully released in March 2012, has yet to reveal a Jupiter-size planet within the Oort cloud. The survey would have revealed such an object if it had existed.

Hoagland extended his theory about the importance of 19.5° latitude when the Chinese lander Chang'e 3 landed on the Moon at 44.1143°N, 19.5149°W. In this case he drew attention to the significance of that same number as a longitude instead of a latitude. He said the Chinese wished to send a coded message to an extraterrestrial intelligence by landing at that longitude.