| Topic: |
Science > Physics |
| User: |
"" |
| Date: |
10 Oct 2005 06:25:23 AM |
| Object: |
Consider the electron as a union of two halves!! |
If the electron has any charge then how come it is stable?
Probably it's not some problem for you cause you can always come up
with some mutant force without any relation for it as it happens to be
the case with your nuclear forces. For me it is problem cause I can
always consider the electorn as two equal splits on significantly small
distance. Your Coulomb's force between them tends to expand the
electron. What makes the electron then stable?
www.geocities.com/dedanoe
Bone in your trowth!!
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| User: "Paul Cardinale" |
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| Title: Re: Consider the electron as a union of two halves!! |
10 Oct 2005 02:30:10 PM |
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wrote:
If the electron has any charge then how come it is stable?
Probably it's not some problem for you cause you can always come up
with some mutant force without any relation for it as it happens to be
the case with your nuclear forces. For me it is problem cause I can
always consider the electorn as two equal splits on significantly small
distance. Your Coulomb's force between them tends to expand the
electron. What makes the electron then stable?
www.geocities.com/dedanoe
Bone in your trowth!!
Coulomb force is macroscopic. Go study QM.
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| User: "" |
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| Title: Re: Consider the electron as a union of two halves!! |
10 Oct 2005 06:31:21 AM |
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Consider the cumtwat as the onion of 3 halves! Makes as much sense as
quantum physics!!!!!!
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| User: "Autymn D. C." |
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| Title: Re: Consider the electron as a union of two halves!! |
07 Nov 2005 10:01:42 PM |
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Stable particles have disordered splittings; unstable particles have
ordered splittings. The electron has a tiny and remote-yet-finite
electric dipole moment. That's what keeps it together and from
decaying into a neutrino and a foton, at ground. Positronium never
found a field-shelter.
-Aut
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