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Quote from: Thebox on 01/03/2018 22:52:25I explain the electrostatic charge is the zpe. NoYou stated that the charge is the ZPE, but that doesn't make sense.Energy isn't the same as charge- different units etc.Just saying something doesn't make it true.
I explain the electrostatic charge is the zpe.
Quote from: Thebox on 27/02/2018 22:56:34I will give you an experiment, emit some electrons directed at some electrons. QuoteColliding two electrons will always produce two scattered electrons, and it may sometimes produce some photons from initial and final state radiation If they had no volume there would be nothing to collide. Electrons are not like little rubber balls that bounce off of each other. Electrons interact with other electrons via the fields that they possess. They themselves do not need any actual volume or size in order to interact with each other in this way.
I will give you an experiment, emit some electrons directed at some electrons. QuoteColliding two electrons will always produce two scattered electrons, and it may sometimes produce some photons from initial and final state radiation If they had no volume there would be nothing to collide.
Colliding two electrons will always produce two scattered electrons, and it may sometimes produce some photons from initial and final state radiation
No, I stated the electrostatic is the ZPE, charge/polarity a property of the electrostatic .
The field they possess is the electron in my notion, so yes they are little rubber balls but are only a shell.
Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 11:27:46No, I stated the electrostatic is the ZPE, charge/polarity a property of the electrostatic . Did you read that through before posting it?Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 11:40:19The field they possess is the electron in my notion, so yes they are little rubber balls but are only a shell.Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?
An electron has a diameter
Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?
Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:06:04An electron has a diameterQuote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 13:56:09Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 14:10:38Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:06:04An electron has a diameterQuote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 13:56:09Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?If something has a force it has a body, if something has a body it has a volume, that is the evidence.
If something has a force it has a body, if something has a body it has a volume, that is the evidence.
Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:11:47Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 14:10:38Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:06:04An electron has a diameterQuote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 13:56:09Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?If something has a force it has a body, if something has a body it has a volume, that is the evidence. What about the wind?
Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:11:47If something has a force it has a body, if something has a body it has a volume, that is the evidence. The electromagnetic and weak nuclear fields of an electron have volume. So by your own reasoning, that's sufficient to explain why they can exert force on other things. The electron itself need not have any volume.Even if electrons do have a finite size and volume, it does not follow that they are composite particles made up of smaller entities that can repel each other. One of your problems is that you think of quantum objects as if they were macroscopic objects like gas clouds. A gas cloud is made up of small, tangible particles capable of interacting with each other. They can move closer to each other or farther apart. So far, there is no evidence that electrons are made of anything smaller than themselves. So such an analogy is faulty from the get-go.
Imagine an electron to be made up of repulsive points and it stretching from the inside out. A bit like a balloon inflating but without the air. The inner walls of the ''balloon'' being repulsive . The ''skin'' of the ''balloon, stretched. In comparison a hollow rubber ball.
Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 21:02:32Imagine an electron to be made up of repulsive points and it stretching from the inside out. A bit like a balloon inflating but without the air. The inner walls of the ''balloon'' being repulsive . The ''skin'' of the ''balloon, stretched. In comparison a hollow rubber ball. There you go with analogies to macroscopic objects again. There are no experiments demonstrating that electrons are made up of "repulsive points" or anything smaller than themselves. There are no experiments that demonstrate individual electrons behave like rubber.
I did not make my statement based on nothing.
Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 23:05:06I did not make my statement based on nothing. You make your statements based on unsupported assumptions about the properties of electrons, which makes them suspect.
Quote from: The Spoon on 02/03/2018 15:15:12Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:11:47Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 14:10:38Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:06:04An electron has a diameterQuote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 13:56:09Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?If something has a force it has a body, if something has a body it has a volume, that is the evidence. What about the wind?You mean air travelling at a velocity don't you?
Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 20:58:04Quote from: The Spoon on 02/03/2018 15:15:12Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:11:47Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 14:10:38Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:06:04An electron has a diameterQuote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 13:56:09Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?If something has a force it has a body, if something has a body it has a volume, that is the evidence. What about the wind?You mean air travelling at a velocity don't you? People know what the wind is - why do you give such a meaningless, convoluted definition? How does it actually relate to the point?
Quote from: The Spoon on 03/03/2018 11:37:26Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 20:58:04Quote from: The Spoon on 02/03/2018 15:15:12Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:11:47Quote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 14:10:38Quote from: Thebox on 02/03/2018 14:06:04An electron has a diameterQuote from: Bored chemist on 02/03/2018 13:56:09Still not troubling yourself to worry about actual evidence or facts then?If something has a force it has a body, if something has a body it has a volume, that is the evidence. What about the wind?You mean air travelling at a velocity don't you? People know what the wind is - why do you give such a meaningless, convoluted definition? How does it actually relate to the point? You asked about the wind, the answer I gave was related to what you asked, unless you meant something else. But if you are writing a question you did not mean to ask, I can only give the answer to what you asked.