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  1. Naked Science Forum
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  4. How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
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How big is an electron if we measure its force field?

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Online chiralSPO

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #20 on: 03/06/2015 16:34:46 »
Simple fact: if you put something in water it gets wet.

Simple question: if you put an electron in water does it get wet?

Ponder this a while and then think about your other questions in the same way. I will give hints if you (jccc) ask for them.
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Offline jccc (OP)

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #21 on: 03/06/2015 17:20:13 »
well, let's get wet together.

please tell the secret of atomic structure.

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Offline alancalverd

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #22 on: 03/06/2015 23:34:16 »
Quote from: jccc on 03/06/2015 14:21:09
isn't in micro world, newton's law not working? coulomb's law not working?

Scientific laws are nothing more than mathematical approximations to observations. There's no question of "laws not working" - it just happens that when you look closely at something, the behaviour is often more complicated than it seems at a distance.   
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Offline jccc (OP)

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #23 on: 05/06/2015 17:53:49 »
everything has its unique mechanism. all physics laws must be obeyed.

science is precise description of reality. micro world is the same, no magic, no mystery.

if anyone really understood atomic structure, please come forward.

it is ok to say i am not sure about it. we are learning all the time.
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Offline jccc (OP)

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #24 on: 05/06/2015 21:12:08 »
without other force, 2 masses at r distance will attract each other and come closer and impact.

same way for 2 opposite charges, such as proton and electron in atoms.

electron able to obit is a mystery not yet answered.

we have all kinds of high tech toys, not yet a working model of a hydrogen atom. what a surprise?
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Offline jerrygg38

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #25 on: 06/06/2015 17:08:43 »
Quote from: jccc on 16/05/2015 20:53:18
suppose we can measure the force between 2 electrons light year apart, can we assume electron has a light year radius?

what if we can measure any amount of force? is force liner?

i had a feeling, box and i experienced most headaches thinking science. for we are slower.

 
  In my Dot-wave theory the source of our existence is external to us. therefore the electron which is composed of 5.75037E41 dot-waves of charge 2.78622E-61 coulombs and mass 1.58411E-72kg has a source at a distance of 13.7827billion light years away. A rock has nothing inside it. We have nothing inside of us. Everything is focal points of the electromagnetic field. Yet to us a rock contains substance. This is only apparent and not real. Of course this is hard to believe but we exist in the mind of the universe.
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Online chiralSPO

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #26 on: 22/06/2015 20:45:42 »
Quote from: chiralSPO on 03/06/2015 16:34:46
Simple fact: if you put something in water it gets wet.

Simple question: if you put an electron in water does it get wet?

Ponder this a while and then think about your other questions in the same way. I will give hints if you (jccc) ask for them.

so, jccc... any progress?
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Offline jccc (OP)

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #27 on: 22/06/2015 21:46:57 »
getting there.

electrons don't get wet.

they got sucked by proton's positive force field, started to dance around like a cloud? sometimes they become standing waves? sometimes they change orbitals and emit photons?

seems the logic is wet. no?

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Offline jccc (OP)

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Re: How big is an electron if we measure its force field?
« Reply #28 on: 25/06/2015 04:33:44 »
so the logic is not wet?
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