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On Mon, 2 Dec 2024 17:44:33 +0000, rhertz wrote:One imagines not, necessarily, since for example that
>SOME CORRECTIONS TO THE PREVIOUS POST:>
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On Mon, 2 Dec 2024 0:36:16 +0000, rhertz wrote:
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<snip>
>From their paper, this is the balance (as published in 1932):>
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Lithium7 amu 7.0104
Hydrogen amu 1.0072
8.0176
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Helium amu 4.0011
Helium amu 4.0011
8.0022
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Difference Δamu = 0.0154 ± 0.003 amu = 14.3 MeV ± 2.8 MeV. To this, it
has to be added an extra energy of 2.7 MeV
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Δamu varies between 0.0124 amu and 0.0187 amu.
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The total change in energy ΔE varies between 14.3 MeV and 19.8 MeV.
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It corresponds to equations:
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ΔE = 2/3 Δmc² for 14.3 MeV
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ΔE = 7/5 Δmc² for 19.8 MeV
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Authors claimed that momentum was accounted and conserved.
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These values are written, after hundred of experiments, following the
relationship:
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7:3 Li + 1:1 H ---> 4:2 He + 4:2 He + energy
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https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rspa.1932.0133
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This corresponds to the equation:
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Considering that momentum is conserved and the energy of the proton is
0.6 MeV, the final values are closer to Hassenohrl than to Einstein.
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Hardly an experimental verification of ΔE = Δmc², as relativists have
claimed as this being the first experimental proof of such equation.
Modern measurements are much more accurate. For example,
https://www.nature.com/articles/4381096a
The full paper is also available online.
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Many more measurements are consistent with E=mc^2, even if the
measurements are not from experiments specifically designed to
test the prediction. For instance, electron-positron annihilation
is routinely observed to result in 0.511 MeV gamma rays.
>
Do you honestly believe that some sort of conspiracy exists to
suppress measurements inconsistent with relativistic predictions?
Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.