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What if (on Darla)
On Oct 26, 6:47 pm, (G=EMC^2 Glazier) wrote: Last post from Darla was at the time the earth had the "chicken flu" spreading. Could be the Seans came down with it real bad. They fled the Earth to save their lives,but in reality it was to late,and their space ship is a space coffin. Computers keep the ship alive,but its passengers are all dead. We must not forget the Seans had no Earth imunity. Even us Earthlings have problems overcoming Earth cultivated viruses Hope I am dead wrong Bert Sorry dear Bert that I missed this post of yours. Seans are naturally immune to all the dangerous viruses and bacteria. Thank you so very much for your concern for us! -- **** Darla of news:sci.electromagnetics Be well and come, be welcome. You are the fifth star! |
#2
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What if (on Darla)
Darla Glad I was just talking fiction. Glad your great ship was not
"lost in space" In my novel "Stepping Stones" I had a chapter where in their search for Earth they came upon a ship that was running on silicone life. Was going to answer on "fusion" To add it takes great heat and pressure to create a nuclear reaction in which the nuclei of atoms combine to produce great energy. Compression force of gravity makes stars. v Both fusion and fission give nuclear energy. Fission uses heavy atoms"uranium" Fusion uses the lightest atom hydrogen.(two forms) Mother nature uses fusion to make stars Humankind makes thermonuclear weapons(bombs) I have invented a "Pulse fusion machine" to give humans long lasting free energy. It would take 6 billion bucks to build. I warned Columbia U that the Tokamak would melt down in seconds when they bought it from Russia. My fusion machine I guarantee would work for 75 years or more. I would swap my invention just to know the source of gravity.Go figure Bert your gravity thinking man always |
#3
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What if (on Darla)
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Darla Glad I was just talking fiction. Glad your great ship was not "lost in space" In my novel "Stepping Stones" I had a chapter where in their search for Earth they came upon a ship that was running on silicone life. Was going to answer on "fusion" To add it takes great heat and pressure to create a nuclear reaction in which the nuclei of atoms combine to produce great energy. Compression force of gravity makes stars. v Both fusion and fission give nuclear energy. Fission uses heavy atoms"uranium" Fusion uses the lightest atom hydrogen.(two forms) Mother nature uses fusion to make stars Humankind makes thermonuclear weapons(bombs) I have invented a "Pulse fusion machine" to give humans long lasting free energy. It would take 6 billion bucks to build. I warned Columbia U that the Tokamak would melt down in seconds when they bought it from Russia. My fusion machine I guarantee would work for 75 years or more. I would swap my invention just to know the source of gravity.Go figure Bert your gravity thinking man always And are you absolutely certain that your fusion machine wouldn't produce black holes? G Now, let's see, you want to swap your invention for the source of gravity. If I made you this swap, then I would have to pay someone 6 billion bucks to build it. Hmm. But you already know the Source of gravity. What you really want to know is HOW the source of gravity, matter, produces the gravitational effect, no? The secret of knowing is in the changes. Energy does not produce a gravitational effect until it changes into matter. Now, energy and matter are sort of like water and ice, aren't they? Two forms of the same thing? So ask yourself, "How does energy, when its form changes into matter, all of a sudden produce the gravitational effect?" What is different? What is so different that a mysterious effect called gravity begins to manifest itself? -- **** Darla of news:sci.electromagnetics Be well and come, be welcome. You are the fifth star! |
#4
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What if (on Darla)
"Darla" wrote in message g.com... "G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Darla Glad I was just talking fiction. Glad your great ship was not "lost in space" In my novel "Stepping Stones" I had a chapter where in their search for Earth they came upon a ship that was running on silicone life. Was going to answer on "fusion" To add it takes great heat and pressure to create a nuclear reaction in which the nuclei of atoms combine to produce great energy. Compression force of gravity makes stars. v Both fusion and fission give nuclear energy. Fission uses heavy atoms"uranium" Fusion uses the lightest atom hydrogen.(two forms) Mother nature uses fusion to make stars Humankind makes thermonuclear weapons(bombs) I have invented a "Pulse fusion machine" to give humans long lasting free energy. It would take 6 billion bucks to build. I warned Columbia U that the Tokamak would melt down in seconds when they bought it from Russia. My fusion machine I guarantee would work for 75 years or more. I would swap my invention just to know the source of gravity.Go figure Bert your gravity thinking man always And are you absolutely certain that your fusion machine wouldn't produce black holes? G Now, let's see, you want to swap your invention for the source of gravity. If I made you this swap, then I would have to pay someone 6 billion bucks to build it. Hmm. But you already know the Source of gravity. What you really want to know is HOW the source of gravity, matter, produces the gravitational effect, no? The secret of knowing is in the changes. Energy does not produce a gravitational effect until it changes into matter. Now, energy and matter are sort of like water and ice, aren't they? Two forms of the same thing? So ask yourself, "How does energy, when its form changes into matter, all of a sudden produce the gravitational effect?" What is different? What is so different that a mysterious effect called gravity begins to manifest itself? -- **** Darla of news:sci.electromagnetics Be well and come, be welcome. You are the fifth star! Energy also exerts a gravitational effect. It is weak when dealing with the energy of a force or a field (its potential) and is stronger when manifest in matter because matter is a concentrated form of energy. But, gravity ought to be a quantum effect, so we must deal with how quantum mechanics describes mass, namely as a probability wave. A good guess would be that gravity is a gauge field that arises from the way a matter wavefunction moves from a high probability at some point in space to a low probability at some other point infinitely far away. Classically, the gravity of a particle arises from the surface of the particle only. Under the surface, where the particle can be described as a homogenous energy distribution, the gravity vectors arise in all directions and cancel out. Classically, this is why gravity is so much weaker than electromagnetic forces within a particle: the electromagnetic force couples to the entire particle while the gravity force couples only to the 'surface'. Interestingly, it is also possible to have antigravity, even though we don't see it in nature, all structures arise from an internal balancing of both gravity (parallel force vectors) and antigravity (antiparallel force vectors). It will be interesting to see the expressions on some scientists' faces when they finally do make electrically neutral antimatter and they see it fall up when dropped... Greysky |
#5
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What if (on Darla)
Greysky Gravity is so amazing it could easily have its own dimension..
a supersymmetry all its own. We know we can't get together GR with QM Talk of 11 dimensions (give me a break) Maybe only the brain of Witten?? Bert |
#6
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What if (on Darla)
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Greysky Gravity is so amazing it could easily have its own dimension.. a supersymmetry all its own. We know we can't get together GR with QM Talk of 11 dimensions (give me a break) Maybe only the brain of Witten?? Bert You humans don't know squat about gravity. Eleven dimensions, indeed. How does "sewersymmetry" (congratulations on spelling it correctly) coexist with the uncertainty principle, Bert? Gravity DOES have its own dimension. For humans it's called "the twilight zone". -- **** the Proz |
#7
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What if (on Darla)
"G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Greysky Gravity is so amazing it could easily have its own dimension.. a supersymmetry all its own. We know we can't get together GR with QM Talk of 11 dimensions (give me a break) Maybe only the brain of Witten?? 11 dimensions solves many of the mathematical problems with our best understanding of string theory/M theory. So far, it's the best we've got. |
#8
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What if (on Darla)
"greysky" wrote in message ... "Darla" wrote in message g.com... "G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Darla Glad I was just talking fiction. Glad your great ship was not "lost in space" In my novel "Stepping Stones" I had a chapter where in their search for Earth they came upon a ship that was running on silicone life. Was going to answer on "fusion" To add it takes great heat and pressure to create a nuclear reaction in which the nuclei of atoms combine to produce great energy. Compression force of gravity makes stars. v Both fusion and fission give nuclear energy. Fission uses heavy atoms"uranium" Fusion uses the lightest atom hydrogen.(two forms) Mother nature uses fusion to make stars Humankind makes thermonuclear weapons(bombs) I have invented a "Pulse fusion machine" to give humans long lasting free energy. It would take 6 billion bucks to build. I warned Columbia U that the Tokamak would melt down in seconds when they bought it from Russia. My fusion machine I guarantee would work for 75 years or more. I would swap my invention just to know the source of gravity.Go figure Bert your gravity thinking man always And are you absolutely certain that your fusion machine wouldn't produce black holes? G Now, let's see, you want to swap your invention for the source of gravity. If I made you this swap, then I would have to pay someone 6 billion bucks to build it. Hmm. But you already know the Source of gravity. What you really want to know is HOW the source of gravity, matter, produces the gravitational effect, no? The secret of knowing is in the changes. Energy does not produce a gravitational effect until it changes into matter. Now, energy and matter are sort of like water and ice, aren't they? Two forms of the same thing? So ask yourself, "How does energy, when its form changes into matter, all of a sudden produce the gravitational effect?" What is different? What is so different that a mysterious effect called gravity begins to manifest itself? -- **** Darla of news:sci.electromagnetics Be well and come, be welcome. You are the fifth star! Energy also exerts a gravitational effect. It is weak when dealing with the energy of a force or a field (its potential) and is stronger when manifest in matter because matter is a concentrated form of energy. But, gravity ought to be a quantum effect, so we must deal with how quantum mechanics describes mass, namely as a probability wave. A good guess would be that gravity is a gauge field that arises from the way a matter wavefunction moves from a high probability at some point in space to a low probability at some other point infinitely far away. Classically, the gravity of a particle arises from the surface of the particle only. Under the surface, where the particle can be described as a homogenous energy distribution, the gravity vectors arise in all directions and cancel out. Classically, this is why gravity is so much weaker than electromagnetic forces within a particle: the electromagnetic force couples to the entire particle while the gravity force couples only to the 'surface'. Interestingly, it is also possible to have antigravity, even though we don't see it in nature, all structures arise from an internal balancing of both gravity (parallel force vectors) and antigravity (antiparallel force vectors). It will be interesting to see the expressions on some scientists' faces when they finally do make electrically neutral antimatter and they see it fall up when dropped... Greysky Greysky, you're one of the better humans here, but there is no such thing as exerting a gravitational effect. Neither energy nor matter does this. It's the age-old problem of the girl walking down a lonesome street in Daisy Dukes (hot pants). When she gets raped, is it the rapist's fault? or is it her fault for "enticing" him? Newton and Einstein couldn't figure gravity out because they kept thinking it was her fault. -- **** the Proz |
#9
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What if (on Darla)
"Pros Pere" wrote in message g.com... "greysky" wrote in message ... "Darla" wrote in message g.com... "G=EMC^2 Glazier" wrote in message ... Darla Glad I was just talking fiction. Glad your great ship was not "lost in space" In my novel "Stepping Stones" I had a chapter where in their search for Earth they came upon a ship that was running on silicone life. Was going to answer on "fusion" To add it takes great heat and pressure to create a nuclear reaction in which the nuclei of atoms combine to produce great energy. Compression force of gravity makes stars. v Both fusion and fission give nuclear energy. Fission uses heavy atoms"uranium" Fusion uses the lightest atom hydrogen.(two forms) Mother nature uses fusion to make stars Humankind makes thermonuclear weapons(bombs) I have invented a "Pulse fusion machine" to give humans long lasting free energy. It would take 6 billion bucks to build. I warned Columbia U that the Tokamak would melt down in seconds when they bought it from Russia. My fusion machine I guarantee would work for 75 years or more. I would swap my invention just to know the source of gravity.Go figure Bert your gravity thinking man always And are you absolutely certain that your fusion machine wouldn't produce black holes? G Now, let's see, you want to swap your invention for the source of gravity. If I made you this swap, then I would have to pay someone 6 billion bucks to build it. Hmm. But you already know the Source of gravity. What you really want to know is HOW the source of gravity, matter, produces the gravitational effect, no? The secret of knowing is in the changes. Energy does not produce a gravitational effect until it changes into matter. Now, energy and matter are sort of like water and ice, aren't they? Two forms of the same thing? So ask yourself, "How does energy, when its form changes into matter, all of a sudden produce the gravitational effect?" What is different? What is so different that a mysterious effect called gravity begins to manifest itself? -- **** Darla of news:sci.electromagnetics Be well and come, be welcome. You are the fifth star! Energy also exerts a gravitational effect. It is weak when dealing with the energy of a force or a field (its potential) and is stronger when manifest in matter because matter is a concentrated form of energy. But, gravity ought to be a quantum effect, so we must deal with how quantum mechanics describes mass, namely as a probability wave. A good guess would be that gravity is a gauge field that arises from the way a matter wavefunction moves from a high probability at some point in space to a low probability at some other point infinitely far away. Classically, the gravity of a particle arises from the surface of the particle only. Under the surface, where the particle can be described as a homogenous energy distribution, the gravity vectors arise in all directions and cancel out. Classically, this is why gravity is so much weaker than electromagnetic forces within a particle: the electromagnetic force couples to the entire particle while the gravity force couples only to the 'surface'. Interestingly, it is also possible to have antigravity, even though we don't see it in nature, all structures arise from an internal balancing of both gravity (parallel force vectors) and antigravity (antiparallel force vectors). It will be interesting to see the expressions on some scientists' faces when they finally do make electrically neutral antimatter and they see it fall up when dropped... Greysky Greysky, you're one of the better humans here, but there is no such thing as exerting a gravitational effect. Neither energy nor matter does this. It's the age-old problem of the girl walking down a lonesome street in Daisy Dukes (hot pants). When she gets raped, is it the rapist's fault? or is it her fault for "enticing" him? Newton and Einstein couldn't figure gravity out because they kept thinking it was her fault. -- **** the Proz Aye Karumba, Pere, now my flying saucer will never get off the ground. But, a properly worn pair of Daisy Dukes can be a powerful motivator for me to stay put. When I see a pretty young thaang walking along the street in hot pants, I look. If she notices me looking and smiles and slows down her walk then I look harder. If she doesn't, I still look and file it away under miss - opportunity There is definitely a communication going on between me and the girl. I can see how mass and energy can relate to gravity in much the same way. If you wanna educate me further, I can only hope you look good in a pair of Daisy Dukes... :-) Greysky |
#10
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What if (on Darla)
"Pros Pere" wrote in message g.com... Greysky, you're one of the better humans here, but there is no such thing as exerting a gravitational effect. Neither energy nor matter does this. It's the age-old problem of the girl walking down a lonesome street in Daisy Dukes (hot pants). When she gets raped, is it the rapist's fault? or is it her fault for "enticing" him? Can't rape the willing. |
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