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I think you'll need to define what you mean by an oscillating magnetic moment.
Is it possible that the electron magnetic moment oscillates at a very rapid rate?
for a magnetic field of 3350 Gauss, spin resonance occurs near 9388.2 MHz for an electron compared to only about 14.3 MHz for 1H nuclei.
it starts from a finite, nonzero value a rises to a+b, goes down again to a then goes down to a-c > 0, then rises again to a.
I mean it starts from a finite, nonzero value a rises to a+b, goes down again to a then goes down to a-c > 0, then rises again to a.
A spontaneously changing spin sounds like it would violate conservation of angular momentum.
electric charge rotates faster and slower in an oscillatory fashion.
Not in my model
What would you say if I say my model must allow the mass charge circle to rotate slower and faster?
Then your model is inconsistent with the laws of physics.
I'd ask why you were still dragging the dead corpse of your idea around.
The Laws of Physics that imply particles are points
Quote from: Bored chemist on Yesterday at 21:57:42I'd ask why you were still dragging the dead corpse of your idea around.It was never dead: see above.
The Laws of Physics that imply particles are points are wrong at small distances from the particle.
What law of physics states that?
No law of physics makes any such implication.
It is dead.
You haven't even seen the entire model.
Quote from: talanum1 on 16/04/2021 19:09:10Is it possible that the electron magnetic moment oscillates at a very rapid rate?No.Because, if it did, I could put one near a coil of wire and get it to generate free energy.
Irrelevant since:
Quote from: Kryptid on 18/04/2021 14:56:48What law of physics states that?Irrelevant since:Quote from: Bored chemist on 18/04/2021 12:17:04No law of physics makes any such implication.
You're contradicting yourself, because you said:QuoteThe Laws of Physics that imply particles are points are wrong at small distances from the particle.
The part that violates a law of physics is dead, at least