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#21
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On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 03:26:47 -0400, "Paul Mays" wrote:
"Dr. Henri Wilson" HW@.... wrote in message .. . Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into what makes a 'field'. Apart from the fact that the maths describing the forces are well known, action-at-a-distance is as much a mystery as ever. thats because all of physics only applies to matter in motion relitive to other matter in motion. Because of this Causation is missed. I contend that action at a distance is due to all matter being connected by the Quantum State ( left over indefinable energy after some matter was converted out of the Quantum Point of the BB) this Quantum State acts as an inverse tensor between all Physical Particles no matter the seperation distance of the particles. This is observed as Gravitational Wells around massive objects. Meaningless drivel....take up preaching.... Henri Wilson. ASTC,BSc,DSc(T) www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm .....specialising in teaching physics to engineers and mathematicians.... |
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#22
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On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 21:12:48 +0200, "Thomas Heger" wrote:
"Dr. Henri Wilson" HW@.... schrieb im Newsbeitrag .. . Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into what makes a 'field'. Apart from the fact that the maths describing the forces are well known, action-at-a-distance is as much a mystery as ever. a field is something distributing in space. It could be anything: temperature, sound, magnetism. So field is a concept to describe how that something distributes. Right. Sound and temperature involve the dynamics of a medium. We know how and why they occur. How does that relate to electrostatics of gravity? Where's the 'medium'? What you seemingly want to know, how magnetism i.e. manage to distribute. The right question is not : what is a field? but : what is space? Yes. At last somebody else here is capable of talking sense. Is space just a 'graphical consequence' of fields...or maybe even a psychological consequence...? However, since all our physical experiments are carried out in the familiar 3D space, 1D time, whatever makes one region of that space electrically different from another should be physically as well as mathematically identifiable. Thomas Heger Henri Wilson. ASTC,BSc,DSc(T) www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm .....specialising in teaching physics to engineers and mathematicians.... |
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#23
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On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 00:37:51 -0700 (PDT), PD wrote:
On Apr 13, 6:39*pm, HW@....(Dr. Henri Wilson) wrote: Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into what makes a 'field'. Apart from the fact that the maths describing the forces are well known, action-at-a-distance is as much a mystery as ever. Well, they're actually not much of a mystery. What do you find mysterious about fields? They exist. Consider a completely isolated negative charge in remote space. The question is, does its 'field' exist in the absence of another charge. If so, how is the surrounding space modified in such a way that if another charge is introduced at any distance , a force immediately exists between the two. The force is equal to the field at that location where the second charge appears, times the charge placed there. The force is created by the local field. babbletalk That force can be attractive or repulsive depending whether the charges are unlike or like. The gravitational field associated with unit mass is fundamentally different in that like masses ATTRACT each other. There is no information about the nature of forces between positive and 'negative' mass (presumeably anti-matter). Well, it's actually not to be presumed that antimatter has negative mass. If it did, would it matter? Consider: Start with F=ma. Now let the mass m be acted on by the field from another mass M, GM/ r^2, so that the force on the left-hand side is GMm/r^2. Then we have GMm/r^2 = ma. It is usually written as F= -GMm/r^2, with r positive going away from the centre. So you are saying that when a force acts on anti matter, it accelerates TOWARD the origin of the force. Maybe...but I don't think anyone knows the real answer. Now, suppose the mass m is a bit of antimatter and suppose that antimatter mass m is negative. That is m = -|m|. Then we have -GM|m|/r^2 = -|m|a and you can see the negative signs cancel out, and we're left with the very same acceleration you'd expect from a positive mass m. So what's observably different? Hahaha! You are claiming that if my car was made of anti-matter, it would go forward when I put it in reverse. It can be deduced from this that the properties of space that account for an electrostatic field must be fundamentally different from those that are associated with gravity. Well, duh. Consider the difference in strength is some 30 orders of magnitude. 30! how about the rest? but you are missing the point. It is also apparent that the relative movement of a charge or charges somehow alters their combined surrounding fields to create what is called a magnetic field. Again, although the maths of magnetism are well documented, there is no actual physical model that describes the relationship between electrostatic and magnetic force fields. Oh, BS. Please pick up a second year electrodynamics book, and you'll see there is a very well understood relationship between electric and magnetic fields. Geez, Ralph, just because YOU are ignorant of the answer doesn't mean you should pronounce in public that the answer doesn't exist. Can't you read, idiot. I pointed out that the mathematical relationship was well known . ....and 'Henri' is the name. Rabbo unfortunately died. A second question asks whether the effect of the field of an individual source truly extends to infinity according to the inverse square law or it disintegrates, becomes fragmented and eventually merges with other fields. Why would it disintegrate? Disintegrate into what? What other fields would it merge with? You've just said the electric and gravitational fields are dramatically different? What would you call the merged field and what are its properties? Draper, I know that understanding this stuff requires a brain and you do seem to be making a genuinely effort....so I will try to help you. What I'm getting at is that magnetism might not involve a separate type of field. It is just some kind of distortion/rotation of the stuff that accounts for electrostatic field. Henri Wilson. ASTC,BSc,DSc(T) www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm .....specialising in teaching physics to engineers and mathematicians.... |
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#24
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On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 22:57:47 +0100, "Androcles"
wrote: -- This message is brought to you by Androcles http://www.androcles01.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/ "Paul B. Andersen" wrote in message ... | Dr. Henri Wilson skrev: | Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into | what makes a 'field'. Apart from the fact that the maths describing the forces | are well known, action-at-a-distance is as much a mystery as ever. | | Consider a completely isolated negative charge in remote space. The question | is, does its 'field' exist in the absence of another charge. If so, how is the | surrounding space modified in such a way that if another charge is introduced | at any distance , a force immediately exists between the two. That force can be | attractive or repulsive depending whether the charges are unlike or like. | | The gravitational field associated with unit mass is fundamentally different in | that like masses ATTRACT each other. There is no information about the nature | of forces between positive and 'negative' mass (presumeably anti-matter). | It can be deduced from this that the properties of space that account for an | electrostatic field must be fundamentally different from those that are | associated with gravity. | It is also apparent that the relative movement of a charge or charges somehow | alters their combined surrounding fields to create what is called a magnetic | field. Again, although the maths of magnetism are well documented, there is no | actual physical model that describes the relationship between electrostatic and | magnetic force fields. | | You mean a "physical model" like a clockwork? | Blame it on the fairies. | They connect the fields "physically" with invisible cogs and wheels. | Time-dilated clockwork, Tusseladd. The invisible cogs between Earth and Moon slip 6 hours every million years, remember. Blame it on lunacy - yours. If they can't find the answer in a book, their only escape is to plead lunacy... Henri Wilson. ASTC,BSc,DSc(T) www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm .....specialising in teaching physics to engineers and mathematicians.... |
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#25
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On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 11:40:20 +0100, "Androcles"
wrote: "Jan Panteltje" wrote in message ... [Snip pathetic Schwartz crap]. | "Dr. Henri Wilson" wrote: | There is no mechanism. Ok. | What he says is: In case of 2 electrons, what is happeing between them, | _other_ then writing down some equation that describes the forces we observe. Uh huh. That's ok too. | Does something flow? Absolutely not. Fields can be static, or they move with the associated body, they can grow and shrink. | MECHANISM is what we need, and until that day physics | will not advance This is very true...my point entirely. The physics world is so bogged down with Einsteiniana that the real issues are being totally ignored. Of the three GEM fields known, gravitational, electrostatic and magnetic, it is changes in the magnetic (be it movement or growth), that produce the electrostatic, and vice versa. Yet the magnetic and the electrostatic can and do exist in the absence of the other. Not true. An electrostatic field has no associated magnetic field only in its own frame. It creates a magnetic field in a moving frame. A bar magnet operates because of the alignment and movement of its internal charges. I say a magnetic 'field' is made of the same stuff as the associated electrostatic one. The gravitational field's existence appears to rely solely on the presence of matter. Thus the study of the nature of electrostatic fields in also the study of the nature of matter, one cannot treat one in isolation of the other. Yet throughout history we have done just that, examining matter without regard to its surrounding field. Matter is as much a mystery as action at a distance; our familiarity with it has made us contemptuous. We describe it as atoms, but the atoms we think of as being made of "stuff", having mass, whereas they are better described as the focus of forces. Very true. But there is an obvious difference between the accumulated matter that makes up a planet and the associated gravitation field that extends far into what we regard as pure vacuum. Why the sudden boundary? Ask yourself this. What physically different attributes of two regions of space might account for their electrostatic field strengths of say, X and 2X? | , just like your diamonds (hey got it out). And rubbed it in, which in Schwartz's case is applaudable. Schwartz is the sci.physics leader of the relativist papal guard....a professional irritant.. Henri Wilson. ASTC,BSc,DSc(T) www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm .....specialising in teaching physics to engineers and mathematicians.... |
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#26
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On Apr 14, 6:59*pm, HW@....(Dr. Henri Wilson) wrote:
On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 00:37:51 -0700 (PDT), PD wrote: On Apr 13, 6:39*pm, HW@....(Dr. Henri Wilson) wrote: Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into what makes a 'field'. Apart from the fact that the maths describing the forces are well known, action-at-a-distance is as much a mystery as ever. Well, they're actually not much of a mystery. What do you find mysterious about fields? They exist. Well, then I suppose zebras and crescent wrenches, which also exist, are also a great mystery to you. Consider a completely isolated negative charge in remote space. The question is, does its 'field' exist in the absence of another charge. If so, how is the surrounding space modified in such a way that if another charge is introduced at any distance , a force immediately exists between the two. The force is equal to the field at that location where the second charge appears, times the charge placed there. The force is created by the local field. babbletalk Freshman physics. I realize that anything at the freshman physics level must seem like magic to you. That force can be attractive or repulsive depending whether the charges are unlike or like. The gravitational field associated with unit mass is fundamentally different in that like masses ATTRACT each other. There is no information about the nature of forces between positive and 'negative' mass (presumeably anti-matter). Well, it's actually not to be presumed that antimatter has negative mass. If it did, would it matter? Consider: Start with F=ma. Now let the mass m be acted on by the field from another mass M, GM/ r^2, so that the force on the left-hand side is GMm/r^2. Then we have GMm/r^2 = ma. It is usually written as F= -GMm/r^2, with r positive going away from the centre. If you like. The way I had it written the positive signs point to the center. So you are saying that when a force acts on anti matter, it accelerates TOWARD the origin of the force. Well, that's what F=ma would say. Maybe...but I don't think anyone knows the real answer. Maybe. Perhaps you want to say that F=-ma for antimatter. Now, suppose the mass m is a bit of antimatter and suppose that antimatter mass m is negative. That is m = -|m|. Then we have -GM|m|/r^2 = -|m|a and you can see the negative signs cancel out, and we're left with the very same acceleration you'd expect from a positive mass m. So what's observably different? Hahaha! You are claiming that if my car was made of anti-matter, it would go forward when I put it in reverse. Only if the mass of antimatter is negative (which you said is presumably the case). Of course, I was pointing out that there is no point in presuming that, and then you confirmed that just now. It can be deduced from this that the properties of space that account for an electrostatic field must be fundamentally different from those that are associated with gravity. Well, duh. Consider the difference in strength is some 30 orders of magnitude. 30! how about the rest? but you are missing the point. It is also apparent that the relative movement of a charge or charges somehow alters their combined surrounding fields to create what is called a magnetic field. Again, although the maths of magnetism are well documented, there is no actual physical model that describes the relationship between electrostatic and magnetic force fields. Oh, BS. Please pick up a second year electrodynamics book, and you'll see there is a very well understood relationship between electric and magnetic fields. Geez, Ralph, just because YOU are ignorant of the answer doesn't mean you should pronounce in public that the answer doesn't exist. Can't you read, idiot. I pointed out that the mathematical relationship was well known . And the physical relationship as well, which is quantitatively described with some algebra. ...and 'Henri' is the name. Liar. *Rabbo unfortunately died. Who's Rabbo? A second question asks whether the effect of the field of an individual source truly extends to infinity according to the inverse square law or it disintegrates, becomes fragmented and eventually merges with other fields. Why would it disintegrate? Disintegrate into what? What other fields would it merge with? You've just said the electric and gravitational fields are dramatically different? What would you call the merged field and what are its properties? Draper, I know that understanding this stuff requires a brain and you do seem to be making a genuinely effort....so I will try to help you. What I'm getting at is that magnetism might not involve a separate type of field. It is just some kind of distortion/rotation of the stuff that accounts for electrostatic field. Durrr. That's why it's called the electromagnetic field, Ralph. Because they aren't two separate phenomena. You want to see some documentation where this has been known and documented for a century, Ralph? Henri Wilson. Liar. ASTC,BSc,DSc(T) Filthy liar. www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm ....specialising in teaching physics to engineers and mathematicians.... Deluded filthy liar. |
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#27
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"Dr." Henri Wilson wrote:
Uncle Al wrote: "Dr. Henri Wilson" wrote: Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into what makes a 'field'. [snip rest of crap] 0) a distribution of observable(s) at points in space; 1) intensity 2) gradient 3) divergence 4) curl; 5) idiot. **** off cretin. Why do you bother? He bothers because it's fun. Plus it's little bother really; you make it so easy, "Dr." Wilson. -- --Bryan |
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#28
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"Dr." Henri Wilson wrote:
On Mon, 14 Apr 2008 09:11:36 GMT, Jan Panteltje wrote: On a sunny day (Sun, 13 Apr 2008 17:36:20 -0700) it happened Uncle Al wrote in : "Dr. Henri Wilson" wrote: Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into what makes a 'field'. [snip rest of crap] 0) a distribution of observable(s) at points in space; 1) intensity 2) gradient 3) divergence 4) curl; 5) idiot. Al, what gotten in to you. He addresses a good point, 'field' is just a concept, you can replace it whith 'ghost' in many occasions. There is no mechanism. What he says is: In case of 2 electrons, what is happeing between them, _other_ then writing down some equation that describes the forces we observe. Does something flow? MECHANISM is what we need, and until that day physics will not advance, just like your diamonds (hey got it out). Just feel sorry for the poor bugger. He can't even understand the question.... He's got it on a level you will never know. Perhaps that's too harsh. A level you will probably never know. -- --Bryan |
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#29
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"Dr." Henri Wilson wrote:
"Robert J. Kolker" wrote: The "why" in physics, is really "how". Physics provides the formal (laws), material (entities and objects) and efficient causes (events and interactions) of things. It never provides purpose, end or final causation of things. So physics doesn't explain WHY thunder follows lightning? Where, "Dr." Wilson, did you get that idea? Certainly not from the post to why you are replying, which so carefully stated that what physics cannot provide is the *final* causation of things. I assume you still believe in the thunder god? Yeah, you assume lot's of stuff that is not true. -- --Bryan' |
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#30
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On Apr 14, 9:39*am, HW@....(Dr. Henri Wilson) wrote:
Let's be honest. Nothing physics has produced so far has given any insight into what makes a 'field'. Apart from the fact that the maths describing the forces are well known, action-at-a-distance is as much a mystery as ever. Consider a completely isolated negative charge in remote space. The question is, does its 'field' exist in the absence of another charge. If so, how is the surrounding space modified in such a way that if another charge is introduced at any distance , a force immediately exists between the two. That force can be attractive or repulsive depending whether the charges are unlike or like. The gravitational field associated with unit mass is fundamentally different in that like masses ATTRACT each other. There is no information about the nature of forces between positive and 'negative' mass (presumeably anti-matter). It can be deduced from this that the properties of space that account for an electrostatic field must be fundamentally different from those that are associated with gravity. It is also apparent that the relative movement of a charge or charges somehow alters their combined surrounding fields to create what is called a magnetic field. Again, although the maths of magnetism are well documented, there is no actual physical model that describes the relationship between electrostatic and magnetic force fields. A second question asks whether the effect of the field of an individual source truly extends to infinity according to the inverse square law or it disintegrates, becomes fragmented and eventually merges with other fields. Henri Wilson. ASTC,BSc,DSc(T)www.users.bigpond.com/hewn/index.htm ....specialising in teaching physics to engineers and mathematicians.... I think you are right, Henri. In spite of what physics has been able to explain, there remains a good deal about nature that remains as unexplained as ever. Alen |
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