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Igor To fit with my theory that I came up with in 1963 imperial minds
are now referring to the electron as a cloud. I thank them for listening to me way back then.Stephen Weinberg knew where I was coming from when I told him electron structure is virtual,and regular photons. That is one of my better theories that over time gets better received TreBert |
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On Apr 22, 10:08*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Igor *To fit with my theory that I came up with in 1963 imperial minds are now referring to the electron as a cloud. I thank them for listening to me way back then.Stephen Weinberg knew where I was coming from when I told him electron structure is virtual,and regular photons. *That is one of my better theories that over time gets better received * TreBert Electrons are at least half of the photon. On average there's trillions upon trillions upon trillions of new photons per second being continually created and radiated from within most every cubic light year, of course most of which are of photons we can’t see. Go figure as to the amount of cosmic data that should be endlessly available per any given cubic light year/sec, or for that matter per given m3/sec. One cubic light year = 8.467e47 m3 Volume of our expanding universe = 2e33 x 8.467e47 = 16.934e80 m3 Atoms within our universe of 1.7e81 m3 at 0.1 atom/m3 = 1.7e80 atoms (or if you like to use 0.1 atom/cm3 = 1.7e86 atoms) Our relatively passive sun supposedly radiates 1~2e45 (all inclusive) photons/sec, plus whatever mystery gravitons. (update/correction) Supposedly we have 2e24 significant photon emitting stars within this mostly forever expanding universe of ours (many of them, perhaps more than half, are red dwarfs), and that’s suggesting roughly more than 1e-9 star per cubic light year, with more stars being created on the fly, so to speak, not to mention trillions upon trillions upon trillions of other physical interactions taking place throughout our universe that can’t but help generate photons of their own at any given time, plus there are unavoidably secondary/ recoil photons and thereby third, forth and so on generations of those kinds of pesky photons to contemplate, and yet the mass and energy of this universe remains essentially unchanged. For the moment, I’ll use a conservative 1e25 stars offering an average 1e45 photons/sec. Universe photons/year = ?.?e?? x 31.536e6 = ?.??e?? photons/year Photons per universe/yr = (1e25 x 1e45) x 31.536e6 = 3.15e77 Per given billion years makes that tally worth 3.15e86 photons Per 100 billion years = 3.15e87 photons, and so forth. In other words, it can be safely said there has been and stall always be far more photons than atoms, especially if you’d care to include those pesky quantum photons coexisting within all forms of physical matter. The relatively recent and sudden creation of the absolutely vibrant and extremely active Sirius star/solar system of 12+ solar mass evolving right next door if not on top of us, so to speak, would have been a darn good example of where such deductive observationology of photons would have been very insightful, especially informative from those photons we can’t see. ~ Brad Guth Brad_Guth Brad.Guth BradGuth BG / “Guth Usenet” |
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