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Double A If an electron can be a BH (I do not think it is) its spin
would have to be so great to overcome its gravity. My spin theory has it spinning at c TreBert |
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AA wrote, reposting "~BG":
Why can't an electron be a BH singularity? * Wheeler thought it was. More realistically, the proton as a 'point particle' would be the analog of a BH. Contrast this with the electron's being pictured as an encircling cloud or 'shell' and an orbital of the central proton, as in the H atom. |
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On Feb 11, 4:37*am, (oldcoot) wrote:
AA wrote, reposting "~BG": Why can't an electron be a BH * * * * * * singularity? * Wheeler thought it was. More realistically, the proton as a 'point particle' would be the analog of a BH. Contrast this with the electron's being pictured as an encircling cloud or 'shell' and an orbital of the central proton, as in the H atom. The big mystery to me is why the masses of protons are always the same, and the same with electrons, and the ratio of their masses is always the same, at least as close as we can measure. My suspicion is that there might be slight differences based upon the absorption and emmision of photons, but that some process makes them tend towards a certain mass. Double-A |
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On Feb 11, 12:29*pm, "Painius" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Feb 3, 12:55 am, "Painius" wrote: . . . IOW, does the darkness travel at the same speed as the light? or does it reach us instantly? Two kinds of dark: a) near IR dark (photons invisible to the human eye) b) BH or electron dark (gravity that causes other substances to emit photons) *~ BG I was wondering if anybody would begin coming up with the fact that the "speed of dark" is very real when one considers the IR, the UV, and indeed every frequency of EM radiation outside the visual spectrum. The mystique (for me) comes when i consider that even the dark parts of the night sky, the parts between the stars and other light sources, are chock full of light that we will never see--because it is going in other directions. It will never get to our eyes. *Only the light that comes directly at us can be seen. And these dark areas range from right above us to the distances of those faraway galaxies seen only in the UDF, the "ultra-deep field". *And my weird mind is asking the more sane part of me, "Does it take the same amount of time for the darkness that surrounds those UDF galaxies to reach us as it does the light that's emitted from the galaxies themselves?" Oy. *g I suppose when one considers space to be comprised of a special kind of energy, then this actually might be a valid question? happy days and... * *starry starry nights! -- Indelibly yours, Paine Ellsworth Paine, when I stand outside at night and the sky clears, I could swear that the cold of space is pressing down upon me. I know it's IR escaping from the Eath into space that makes things get colder, but it seems more intuitive to think of it as some agent of cold that is hitting me from space! Double-A |
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On Feb 11, 12:29*pm, "Painius" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message ... On Feb 3, 12:55 am, "Painius" wrote: . . . IOW, does the darkness travel at the same speed as the light? or does it reach us instantly? Two kinds of dark: a) near IR dark (photons invisible to the human eye) b) BH or electron dark (gravity that causes other substances to emit photons) *~ BG I was wondering if anybody would begin coming up with the fact that the "speed of dark" is very real when one considers the IR, the UV, and indeed every frequency of EM radiation outside the visual spectrum. The mystique (for me) comes when i consider that even the dark parts of the night sky, the parts between the stars and other light sources, are chock full of light that we will never see--because it is going in other directions. It will never get to our eyes. *Only the light that comes directly at us can be seen. Of that light coming directly at us, we perceive all of 0.0000001% of its spectrum, and with the best of our instruments we can detect perhaps .0001% of what's out there. In other words, under the best of conditions it's a lost cause. And these dark areas range from right above us to the distances of those faraway galaxies seen only in the UDF, the "ultra-deep field". *And my weird mind is asking the more sane part of me, "Does it take the same amount of time for the darkness that surrounds those UDF galaxies to reach us as it does the light that's emitted from the galaxies themselves?" Oy. *g I suppose when one considers space to be comprised of a special kind of energy, then this actually might be a valid question? Whatever! Good freaking grief, how about instead we focus upon the other intelligent life that's existing/coexisting on Venus, or are you claiming some special kind of weird tunnel and filtered blindness. ~ BG |
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On Feb 11, 4:19*am, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
Double A If an electron can be a BH (I do not think it is) its spin would have to be so great to overcome its gravity. My spin theory has it spinning at c * TreBert Can't do better than c. Double-A |
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oc Where have you been? Typed that on the key board you sent me. Works
great. You will get a letter from me Saturday. Sent it out today. Cloud structure of an electron is made up of every type of photon. Part of natures balancing act is to keep electrons 100% balanced. Absorbed and emitting photons of the same energy is mother natures #1 balancing act. This is the heart of my spin is in theory. TreBert |
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On Feb 11, 1:44*pm, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote:
oc *Where have you been? Typed that on the key board you sent me. Works great. You will get a letter from me Saturday. *Sent it out today. Cloud structure of an electron is made up of every type of photon. Part of natures balancing act is to keep electrons 100% balanced. Absorbed and emitting photons of the same energy is mother natures #1 balancing act. * *This is the heart of my spin is in theory. TreBert It the density of an electron were 1e241e27 g/cm3, makes its volume rather small and likely invisible (like a black hole). ~ BG |
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On Feb 11, 5:07*pm, "Painius" wrote:
"Double-A" wrote in message... ... Paine, when I stand outside at night and the sky clears, I could swear that the cold of space is pressing down upon me. *I know it's IR escaping from the Eath into space that makes things get colder, but it seems more intuitive to think of it as some agent of cold that is hitting me from space! Double-A That's very poetic, AA! *Get yourself a can and start spouting this stuff on a corner and see what happens! Street poetry is, AFAIC, an honorable profession. As far as the logistics of heat and cold? *These terms are relative to the experimenter. *The feeling of heat or cold is a transference, hotter areas transfering their heat to colder areas. *Say, a man comes in from the cold and jumps in bed with his wife, who has been bundled up for some time. *She is warm and transfers her heat to him. *To him, she feels warm. *To her, he feels cold. In spite of being quite the bard, you are Normal, AA. happy days and... * *starry starry nights! -- Indelibly yours, Paine Ellsworth If there were money in poetry, Twittering could pay the rent! "Congratulations on the ALC poem. They were one of the first places that published me, back when the great Virginia Hooper was an editor!" - Chris Stroffolino http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm...iendid=966 74 Double-A |
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