Sujet : Re: What is a photon
De : jimp (at) *nospam* gonzo.specsol.net (Jim Pennino)
Groupes : sci.physicsDate : 30. Jun 2025, 01:36:03
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <ho29jl-u8h31.ln1@gonzo.specsol.net>
References : 1 2 3 4 5
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Bertitaylor <
bertietaylor@myyahoo.com> wrote:
On Sun, 29 Jun 2025 19:45:47 +0000, William Hyde wrote:
Jim Pennino wrote:
In sci.physics Bertitaylor <bertietaylor@myyahoo.com> wrote:
On Sun, 1 Jun 2025 10:03:22 +0000, bertitaylor wrote:
>
A photon is a brief electromagnetic wave pulse travelling a light speed
in the medium of aether.
>
Following antenna theory, of asymmetry in the electron orbit from
external excitation causing vibration to aether. A change in electric
field causes a change in the magnetic field, which again causes a
electric field, which creates a magnetic field, and so on and on,
infinitely infinitely.
>
Woof woof woof woof, great is the design of the universe and wonderful
its workings, when seen in correct detail.
>
Bertietaylor
>
--
>
When a nascent hydrogen ion or proton meets an electron coming at or
near it, one of three things must happen.
>
How would the proton be nascent?
>
What difference would it make if the proton were 5 billion years old
versus 5 nanoseconds old?
>
>
The electron can go past it if the speed or angle was too much.
>
Yes.
>
>
The electron can orbit the proton forming a hydrogen atom.
>
Yes.
>
The electron and proton can meet in tight union and form a neutron.
>
Nope, free protons are stable and don't turn into neutrons. Beta plus
decay is a type of radioactive decay where a proton in a NUCLEUS is
converted into a neutron, a positron and a neutrino.
No in beta decay an electron is emitted just as in alpha decay a helium
nucleus is emitted.
That whooshing sound you just heard is everything that was written going
over your head, Arindam
>
I admit that for a second I wondered if a neutron could not be formed
that way.
A neutron is an electron-proton pair, very very tight. The electron
there can attract other protons making it a deuterium nucleus.
Nope, a neutron is one "up" quark and two "down" quarks, held together
by the strong nuclear force.
>
But, of course, to turn a proton into a neutron an up quark must be
changed to a down quark,
Quack-quack. At some stage imagination becomes reality following
Einsteinian paradigms.
And insanity is following your delusions Arindam.
-- penninojim@yahoo.com