On April 4 I posted a link to my monopole paper at http://vixra.org/pdf/1504.0025v1.pdf and wrote a report here. I had submitted this to PRD on April 2.
On April 16 I received the following rejection of this paper from PRD:
Phys. Rev. D. rejection, April 16, 2015 wrote:If your manuscript were correct, it should be a simple matter to explicitly present a vector potential whose curl is a Coulomb magnetic field and which has no observable singularities. Given the absence of the explicit presentation of such a vector potential, I still conclude that your manuscript is not suitable for publication in Physical Review D.
I was very encouraged by this rejection, because it was no longer asserting that there was something amiss with my paper. Rather, it was simply challenging me to make a particular presentation which I had not made. I read this to say that if I could successfully make this explicit presentation, the paper could be accepted the next time through.
So, this past week I worked on a revision which does include the explicit presentation that I had been challenged to make, and I resubmitted it to PRD last evening.
This latest version of the paper may be found at http://vixra.org/pdf/1504.0200v1.pdf.
The cover letter I sent last night with the resubmission stated as follows:
My resubmission cover letter April 25, 2015 wrote:In your review of April 16 you stated, simply, that “if your manuscript were correct, it should be a simple matter to explicitly present a vector potential whose curl is a Coulomb magnetic field and which has no observable singularities.”
I very much appreciate this wisdom. It was spot-on, and is precisely the type of feedback I would have been hoping to obtain from a thesis advisor if I was some 30 years younger studying at Columbia or my alma mater MIT or a similar institution. Thank you!
The revised manuscript I am submitting today – please note revised title and abstract – does exactly what you suggest. Sections 2, 3 and 4 do explicitly present a vector potential whose curl is a Coulomb magnetic field, and they show how using the standard DQC, this leads to no observable singularities. The rest of the paper goes on to show how the standard DQC can be extended to the fractional Dirac-Wu-Yang charges I have been writing about for the past five months or so, also without observable singularities.
I believe that this revision overcomes all prior objections, and may finally be at a point of development where it is suitable for publication in Phys. Rev. D.
I am keeping my fingers crossed that this will finally do the trick. I will keep you apprised.
Jay

