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Quote from: Thebox on 04/11/2017 14:54:52https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb%27s_lawDo you accept this to be factual science and true?Yes.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coulomb%27s_lawDo you accept this to be factual science and true?
Can we say:The magnitude of the electromagnetic force of attraction between two point charges is directly proportional to the product of the magnitudes of polarities and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. The force is along the straight line joining them?
Quote from: Thebox on 04/11/2017 15:14:38Can we say:The magnitude of the electromagnetic force of attraction between two point charges is directly proportional to the product of the magnitudes of polarities and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. The force is along the straight line joining them?No, we can't, because polarity doesn't have a magnitude.That's why you need to start by learning some science.
You are using the word "polarity" for something which is similar to "charge".Do you man charge?If so, why not say so?The polarity of a charge is a binary variable; positive or negative. It has no magnitude.It's like left handed and right handed. It barely makes sense to ask how left handed someone is; they are or they are not.If you started out by learning some science you would understand things like this.
What's the point of this if you don't accept reality?
Can we say that the + and - polarity is directly proportional to the mass?
The first is that polarity isn't a "quantity"
OK, lets start out by clarifying what sort of variable polarity is
There are an infinite number of integers.
No, we can't, because polarity doesn't have a magnitude.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/11/2017 15:22:16No, we can't, because polarity doesn't have a magnitude.I wouldn't be too sure about that. Some molecules are more polar than others and can have those polarities measured as a dipole moment.Not that it makes Thebox's hypothesis correct, though.
Quote from: Kryptid on 04/11/2017 21:26:02Quote from: Bored chemist on 04/11/2017 15:22:16No, we can't, because polarity doesn't have a magnitude.I wouldn't be too sure about that. Some molecules are more polar than others and can have those polarities measured as a dipole moment.Not that it makes Thebox's hypothesis correct, though.I know.But polarity is not the same as a dipole moment.It's the difference between polarity of a material- like water or the polarity of a thing, like an electron.As it stands, Thebox is confused enough without adding that.
Ok, to clarify this, you are saying no matter how big a mass is or how small a mass is , the polarities in both masses are equal and proportional and equal and proportional attracted and repulsed by polarity?
Quote from: Thebox on 05/11/2017 10:48:17Ok, to clarify this, you are saying no matter how big a mass is or how small a mass is , the polarities in both masses are equal and proportional and equal and proportional attracted and repulsed by polarity?You think that's a clarification?Anyway. No.Nobody said anything like that. You made it up.
No, thats more or less what you are telling me.
Quote from: Thebox on 05/11/2017 15:16:38No, thats more or less what you are telling me.Why are you pretending that you know what I'm saying, better than I do?
Interpretation is not pretending .