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Theory of Replication
16 years 6 days ago #15628
by evolivid
Reply from Mark Baker was created by evolivid
I know there is more to this problem then i can imagine I am hoping
to find some help here
we have to use classical means because of the point particle problem in quantum mechanics
says the radius is zero , maybe to distract from moving to this type of course
I have been thinking that it might be that we will have to work with the mass of a wave in the calculations and forget about the circumference of a particle,...?
MARX
to find some help here
we have to use classical means because of the point particle problem in quantum mechanics
says the radius is zero , maybe to distract from moving to this type of course
I have been thinking that it might be that we will have to work with the mass of a wave in the calculations and forget about the circumference of a particle,...?
MARX
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16 years 6 days ago #15629
by evolivid
Replied by evolivid on topic Reply from Mark Baker
any one have any thoughts on this theory???
Im working on some Visualizations with Mathematica and im wondering
if this forum supports animation and what is the coding language?
looks like it was made with Visual Studio because of the .asp
if any one has some hints here let me know thanks!!
MARX
Im working on some Visualizations with Mathematica and im wondering
if this forum supports animation and what is the coding language?
looks like it was made with Visual Studio because of the .asp
if any one has some hints here let me know thanks!!
MARX
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16 years 6 days ago #23439
by Stoat
Replied by Stoat on topic Reply from Robert Turner
Hi Mark, the equation for the radius of an electron is, lambda = h / mc that gives us the Compton wavelength, 2.42631060001E-12 metres.
I agree that the angular velocity of the electron is c so the angular momentum will be mcr and that gives us an angualr momentum of h.
Myself and cosmicsurfer have been talking about particles being becs. The energy profile of such will be w shaped, rather than v shaped.
I agree that the angular velocity of the electron is c so the angular momentum will be mcr and that gives us an angualr momentum of h.
Myself and cosmicsurfer have been talking about particles being becs. The energy profile of such will be w shaped, rather than v shaped.
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16 years 5 days ago #15634
by cosmicsurfer
Replied by cosmicsurfer on topic Reply from John Rickey
Hi Stoat and EV, I would have to agree with Stoat that point particles are BEC's and we only see the 'v' portion of the 'W' which represents the shape of the greater interactions taking place in this scale of motion. Take a look at the latest HERA collider experiments which reveals that the naive model of the proton is no longer valid. I have to go to a Christmas Party, so will talk more about this later, John
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16 years 4 days ago #15636
by Stoat
Replied by Stoat on topic Reply from Robert Turner
One good thing about a bec particle is that it has to take on a toroidal shape. If you were to fall into one, you'd spriral around the toroid. That has to mean that there's a cyclic acceleration. We can write
e = mc^2 as hf = (F / a) c^2
It would be the ultimate "vomit comet" to take a ride in, at the top of a curve you would weigh an electron , and at the bottom about 1.3 tonnes!
e = mc^2 as hf = (F / a) c^2
It would be the ultimate "vomit comet" to take a ride in, at the top of a curve you would weigh an electron , and at the bottom about 1.3 tonnes!
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16 years 3 days ago #15639
by evolivid
Replied by evolivid on topic Reply from Mark Baker
Hey Stout , Cosmicsurfer
So do you think that the mathematics of a Bose-Einstein condensation might help to describe the energy enthalpy inside a particle made like
the above model but more as a wave that overlaps, and is the overlapping taking place on the electric fields or the magnetic
or does that depend on which force were talking about ie... Strong nuclear or weak nuclear ?
I think I'm going to try to merge the Plasma physics mathematics with the BEC mathematics and see what I get
MARX
So do you think that the mathematics of a Bose-Einstein condensation might help to describe the energy enthalpy inside a particle made like
the above model but more as a wave that overlaps, and is the overlapping taking place on the electric fields or the magnetic
or does that depend on which force were talking about ie... Strong nuclear or weak nuclear ?
I think I'm going to try to merge the Plasma physics mathematics with the BEC mathematics and see what I get
MARX
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