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What's the evidence for the pulse? What's the frequency and duty cycle?
What paradox?
Quote from: Spring Theory on 03/07/2022 13:30:01All charged particles have a magnetic moment due to its "intrinsic" spin.An intrinsic spin requires an intrinsic axis and hence a source for an instrisic pulse.But the charge is not because of the rotation. What's the evidence for the pulse? What's the frequency and duty cycle?
All charged particles have a magnetic moment due to its "intrinsic" spin.An intrinsic spin requires an intrinsic axis and hence a source for an instrisic pulse.
Defining the source of the pulse - the dipole is appropriate. The dipole is formed when a photon circles in on itself in a double orbit. The electric charge points of the photon wave overlap.
Not sure what you mean by duty cycle.
Before we offer new hypotheses to explain observations, let's learn how previous scientists developed classical model of electromagnetism which eventually led to Maxwell's equations. We can also learn the difficulties they faced, which modern students may often overlook or take for granted. Ohm's Law: History and BiographyBiography of Coulomb and his Equation
Quote from: Spring Theory on 04/07/2022 23:30:28Not sure what you mean by duty cycle.
0.7297352562787%
Quote from: Spring Theory on 05/07/2022 12:24:060.7297352562787%Where does it come from?
All charged particles have a magnetic moment due to its "intrinsic" spin.
Defining the source of the pulse - the dipole is appropriate. The dipole is formed when a photon circles in on itself in a double orbit. The electric charge points of the photon wave overlap. The magnetic fields also overlap. In the case of the electron, the negative charge points radially outward and positive charge points inward. With a photon pair or two dipoles, you have a shielded positive charge and only the negative charge presented:
Quote from: Spring Theory on 03/07/2022 13:30:01All charged particles have a magnetic moment due to its "intrinsic" spin.Only those with unpaired spins. An alpha particle has charge -2e but no magnetic moment. A uranium nucleus may or may not have a magnetic moment, depending not on its charge (which is always -92e) but on how many uncharged neutrons it contains.
Quote from: Spring Theory on 04/07/2022 23:30:28Defining the source of the pulse - the dipole is appropriate. The dipole is formed when a photon circles in on itself in a double orbit. The electric charge points of the photon wave overlap. The magnetic fields also overlap. In the case of the electron, the negative charge points radially outward and positive charge points inward. With a photon pair or two dipoles, you have a shielded positive charge and only the negative charge presented:What are the advantages that your model can offer compared to currently existing models? Do they produce different experimental predictions?
It actually matches current experimental results. It also offers an explanation of the Stern Gerlach experiment and superpositions of states.
Quote from: Spring Theory on 06/07/2022 13:57:04It actually matches current experimental results. It also offers an explanation of the Stern Gerlach experiment and superpositions of states.How does your model explain electrostatic/Coulomb's force between two point particles?
One testable prediction will be that a particle that decays into (2) photons
Quote from: Spring Theory on 06/07/2022 13:57:04One testable prediction will be that a particle that decays into (2) photonsWhat particle decays into 2 photons?
PionsEta mesonsPositronium