Milo Wolff
Milo WolffBiographical Data
Date of birth: August 8, 1923 Place of birth: Glen Ridge, New Jersey Nationality : USA
Education
Upsala College, BS (Biophysics),
1948 University of Pennsylvania, MS (Physics/EE),
1953 University of Pennsylvania, PhD (Physics),
1958 Major Academic Discipline(s) Physics, EE, Astronomy, CE, Economics. Area(s) of specialization Optics, particle structure, quantum theory, electromagnetism, light scattering, education, economics
Positions Held
Professor of Physics/EE, University of Indonesia (Bandung Institute of Technology), 1958-1962.
USAID Grant to the U of Kentucky.
Foundation Professor of Physics, University of Singapore (Nanyang Institute of Technology), 1970-72.
Fulbright Grant Support. Professor of Physics, University of Sri-Lanka, 1966-1968. Established the Science Faculty. Asia Foundation support.
Physicist, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: 1963-1969.
Apollo mooncraft navigation system. Measurement of atmospheric chemistry by space-borne Computer-aided Tomography (CAT); principal investigator for airglow height measurement; design of space-viewed horizon sensors; satellite measurements of Earth's gravity.
Member, Technical Staff, Aerospace Corporation, Los Angeles. 1972-1975.
Planning earth-survey satellites. Principal investigator for NASA grant to analyze satellite gravity data.
United Nations, Chief, Science and Technology, Economic Committee for Africa. 1975-77.
Member of NSF Review Team to Pakistan for Science Policy (Sept-Oct), 1974.
Visiting Astronomer, Observatoire de Paris. Plantary Polarization (Nov-Dec), 1979.
Visiting Professor, Nanjing Institute of Technology, China. Space Navigation and Computers (Sept-Oct), 1982.
Honors (awards, fellowships, prizes, honorary degrees.)
Honorary Doctorate of Science, University of Sri-Lanka, 1992 (for pioneer work in establishing the Science Faculty at Kelaniya) Commendation from NASA for research work at Massachusetts Institute of Technology on the Earth's atmosphere and the Moon's surface for navigation of the Apollo spacecraft to the Moon.
Honorary Science Society, Sigma X1 (1952) Various tuition scholarships, NSF Honorable Mention (1951)
Biography in Who's Who in American Science & Engineering
Member, National Academy of Science, Methane Energy Panel (1974)
Major Work
Wolff has found the structure of the electron consisting of two spherical quantum waves, one moving radially outward and another moving radially inward. The center of the waves is the nominal location of the electron 'particle'. These waves extend to infinity, like charge force. All 'particle' waves mix and contribute to each other, thus all matter of the universe is interrelated by this intimate connection between the fundamental 'particles' and the universe. The natural laws are a direct consequence of this Wave Structure of Matter (WSM), thus WSM underlies all of science.
Three Principles underlie the WSM
Principle I. Wave Equation Determines the behavior of Quantum Waves in Space.
Principle II. Wave Density Principle. Generalization of Mach's Principle - determines the density of the quantum wave medium.
Principle III. Minimum Amplitude Principle (MAP). The sum of Wave Amplitudes seeks a Minimum at each point in Space.
Articles by this Author
The Origin of Instantaneous Action in Natural Laws
- By Milo Wolff
- Published 05/28/2008
- Quantum Physics
- Unrated
ABSTRACT: In the last millennium we learned that objects obey fixed laws of nature. Until
the last decade, these laws have been entirely empirical; that is, the laws were measured
properties of nature, no theoretical or physical origin was known. These measurements
indicated that the movement of energy and information, which are needed to carry out the
laws, travel consistently at the speed of light. This motion satisfied our rule of causality;
that is: Events always occur after their causes.
