Ok here is what you've all been waiting for ~_^, my arguments specifically regarding the tech. I've tried to keep the arguments accessible to everyone so you don't have to be a theoretical physicist to understand everything allowing everyone to enjoy its creamy noughty center ^_^.
Firstly, concerning the theory of a quantum-foam made up of virtual particles (which I will get into in a moment) contains various flaws which render it useless. Specifically a model in which pairs of spontaneously generated particle pairs existed wouldn't allow normal mater to exist in the forms it does, because one half of the virtual particle pair could annihilate a particle that wasn't part of the original pair, causing the rapid annihilation of not only a few circuits or DNA strands but of
anything above the sub-atomic in the universe; and I'm quite sure I exist, so I don't think suspension of disbelief is keeping me from being annihilated.
If complete annihilation isn't enough to sway someone's faith in the theory, they should also know this theory leaves us with a spontaneous generation of an entire universe worth of these virtual particles. Unfortunately, this leads to the problem of ‘wouldn't a number of particles like that also have mass?' the answer is yes they would have mass!, and ‘wouldn't they have other effects, just like all other matter?' yes that's right too! This is an unsolved problem, because if the model has these virtual particles, they still must have real effects, you know those effects that we have in the
most fundamental laws of physics, which
when the theory is compared to actual data it fails. The predicted value for the energy of these virtual particles would be either infinite or an extremely large number, which isn't the case when compared to scientific measurements, when compared the predicted to observed values give a discrepancy on the order of
240 orders of magnitude (
which is even beyond insanely off!). In the theory, with the energy value as it is predicted, implies a massive gravity field that is
not at all observed Whats the conclusion from this point? That if there was a sea of virtual particles, there would be a number of observable effects, which
isn't the case, the difference is beyond anything reasonable, in effect making the theory somewhat less credible than the
FSM (may his noodly appendage be upon you ^_^ ).
Now concerning virtual particles specifically, virtual particles are normally used as a simplification device in Feynman diagrams (you know when your teacher says "Things don't really work quite this way, but doing this saves us from having to write a large number of advanced mathematical formulasâ€