Sujet : Re: The failure of the unified field theory means general relativity fails.
De : ttt_heg (at) *nospam* web.de (Thomas Heger)
Groupes : sci.physics.relativity sci.physics sci.mathDate : 07. Jul 2024, 09:19:22
Autres entêtes
Message-ID : <lev1c8Fl85bU5@mid.individual.net>
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Am Samstag000006, 06.07.2024 um 13:41 schrieb Richard Hachel:
Le 06/07/2024 à 07:04, Thomas Heger a écrit :
Am Samstag000006, 06.07.2024 um 02:15 schrieb bertietaylor:
Conservation of charge is the only conservation law.
Rest is bollocks.
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I would say: no, charge is not 'observer invariant'.
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Actually I try to promote a concept, where the electron and a photon are the same thing, where the electron is circeling around in an atom, while the photon flies away in a streight line.
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The 'photoelectric effect' is then easy:
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in this concept a photon is kind of helical srew (wave packet).
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If that is stopped (e.g. by a metall screen) then the helical screw is 'knocked flat' and circles around a point, hence is an electron.
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A electron is actually not a real separate entity, but a certain aspect of a standing 'rotation wave'.
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The outer edge is called 'electron' and the inner turning point 'proton'.
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If the electron 'rolls away', it will become a photon.
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And if the photon gets stopped, it will become an electron.
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Therefore: charge is not conserved.
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TH
C'est intéressant.
Sauf que j'ai toujours dit que "the photon doesn't exist".
Sorry, but I understand only very little French ( a little but, but not much).
So, please, say it again, but in English.
(german would be ok, too, but I guess you don't speak that).
TH