Sujet : Re: Time Dilation Experiments
De : ross.a.finlayson (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Ross Finlayson)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativityDate : 12. Nov 2024, 05:57:36
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <Qo6dnQkX9umifa_6nZ2dnZfqn_SdnZ2d@giganews.com>
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On 07/06/2022 10:02 AM, Ross A. Finlayson wrote:
On Wednesday, July 6, 2022 at 9:16:24 AM UTC-7, Ross A. Finlayson wrote:
On Wednesday, July 6, 2022 at 9:02:37 AM UTC-7, Ross A. Finlayson wrote:
On Wednesday, July 6, 2022 at 1:08:15 AM UTC-7, J. J. Lodder wrote:
Ross A. Finlayson <ross.fi...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Tuesday, July 5, 2022 at 2:21:28 PM UTC-7, Volney wrote:
On 7/5/2022 4:57 PM, Ed Lake wrote:
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A photon is a moving electromagnetic charge. When you have lots of
photons, you have a greater electromagnetic charge.
Idjit. Photons have NO charge! You didn't even understand what you
copied-and-pasted.
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Photons are virtual moments in magnetic fields which have energy.
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These are electronic photons, though.
As opposed to quarkonic photons?
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Jan
No, quarks are part of hadrons, these are leptops.
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Or "what obey the statistics, fermions and bosons and so on".
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Quarks and gluons, exhibit asymptotic freedom which is so great.
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I'm sorry if you're asking, does the wavepacket have energy in electron volts?
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In a Dirac positronic sea, these are the electrical fields' "photons".
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Here whatever is the force carrier of energy of exchange, happening
to be in the same wave-front, according to statics: these are photons.
No, I mean leptons.
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I see that photons are being called hadrons whether they are hadrons or leptons,
here the hadrons are matter and the leptons are charge, that "photon" being
"massless hadron" or "chargeless lepton", is about same.
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("Light-like")
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Wiki's pretty great these days: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Static_forces_and_virtual-particle_exchange
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