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#71
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Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: FrediFizzx wrote: "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in message ... Paul's analysis is a bit ridiculous of charge self-energization, Purcell is clear on that on pg 8, charge is essentially relative and a single charge has no absolute or solitary existance, anymore than velocity does. What you can do is use 3 charges in a spatial configuration like, (+) (-)(-) within a radius of ~10^-18 m and simulate the characteristics of an electron, I use a computer simulation to do that. Ken, it is not quite that simple. It has to be all bound charge surrounding the (+) otherwise you will have a multipole config. FrediFizzx Yes Fred thanks. I reason the electron has intrinsic spin I'll diagram using (a) and (b) as negative charges, and cycles like, (+) (+) (b)(a) (a)(b) (+)........... (a)(b) (b)(a) (+) (+) (a)(b)......... yielding intrinsic spin and mass, and an associated characteristic frequency relating the rate of the spin (a)(b) to (+) that is the instrinsic spin, because they have a ratio of 1/2 as in the diagram as you can see. The "characteristic frequency" is E=h*f. That also provides the magnetic pole and the angular momentum, which is a multipole effect, and is evident in the super-conductive Cooper pair state. Fred, I should add that this is my personal working model that Edward asked about in his OP, FWIW, but I see no major problem making it Generally Relativistic based on the same theory that we posted at your site, http://www.vacuum-physics.com/KST/GR_Charge_Couple3.pdf What's unpopular about my approach is the use of nonsymmetrical metrics to model EM, but that's how I build an electron :-), to each his own. Ken S. Tucker, You earlier made a statement to the effect: ~charge is charge, is only in relation to something else~. That was the basis I used in concluding that Freddi Sue and KST share the same view of electron/positron spin. But you are saying something in your GR shoe-horning that implies self interaction. I think I avoided "self interaction" by relying on charge relations. If you can apply +GR and -GR for e+ and e- it would remove self interaction but I couldn't divine that from your discussion. There is no +GR vs -GR that I used, unless you could be more specific. My POV is that electron/positron spin *number* is intrinsic to the ~structure~ but the orientation is a function of the dielectric background. Yes I agree. See the spin-orbit comments he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation The energy necessary to flip spins in an ensemble seems to support that notion. I can't, with any fidelity, translate your ascii array above to follow your discussion. It is a valiant attempt however. Just means charges (a) and (b) spin revolve twice as fast as the charge (+). This is where I 'accuse' :-) you of fence-sitting. You are using the word 'revolve' perhaps without intending, to describe a 2D entity. I am taking the position that a single electron or positron has nothing it can rotate or revolve. My POV is electron spin can't be described in terms of an axis through the particle. We allude to that description for what might more realistically be described as a motion of the electron's center established by neighboring entities which *do* have the spatial definiton to rotate. If we naievly assume an indivdual electron is spherical, is looks the same from any angle. It has no intrinsic axis but it does have a center. The quantum description imbues the electron with a pseudo-axis so it can mathematically represent its environment, even when mathematically severed from its environment. Using the term 'orbit' instead of 'revolve' seems just as incorrect but at least it describes motion *of* the center as opposed to motion *about* the center. You'll point out 'it is all relative anyway' and that is probably the source of the confusion. Your ~point~ of reference is slightly different and still retains the ability to assume a pseudo-axis, inherited from a QM description? ??? If revolve is something between rotate and orbit then I'll withdraw my charges of fence-sitting. The assumption of those embracing the simple point concept for an electron, and then whine that it has infinite density get what they want, GR flunks there...duh. The electron structure can be investigated by positrons. Ken .... |
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Ken S. Tucker wrote:
Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: FrediFizzx wrote: "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in message ... Paul's analysis is a bit ridiculous of charge self-energization, Purcell is clear on that on pg 8, charge is essentially relative and a single charge has no absolute or solitary existance, anymore than velocity does. What you can do is use 3 charges in a spatial configuration like, (+) (-)(-) within a radius of ~10^-18 m and simulate the characteristics of an electron, I use a computer simulation to do that. Ken, it is not quite that simple. It has to be all bound charge surrounding the (+) otherwise you will have a multipole config. FrediFizzx Yes Fred thanks. I reason the electron has intrinsic spin I'll diagram using (a) and (b) as negative charges, and cycles like, (+) (+) (b)(a) (a)(b) (+)........... (a)(b) (b)(a) (+) (+) (a)(b)......... yielding intrinsic spin and mass, and an associated characteristic frequency relating the rate of the spin (a)(b) to (+) that is the instrinsic spin, because they have a ratio of 1/2 as in the diagram as you can see. The "characteristic frequency" is E=h*f. That also provides the magnetic pole and the angular momentum, which is a multipole effect, and is evident in the super-conductive Cooper pair state. Fred, I should add that this is my personal working model that Edward asked about in his OP, FWIW, but I see no major problem making it Generally Relativistic based on the same theory that we posted at your site, http://www.vacuum-physics.com/KST/GR_Charge_Couple3.pdf What's unpopular about my approach is the use of nonsymmetrical metrics to model EM, but that's how I build an electron :-), to each his own. Ken S. Tucker, You earlier made a statement to the effect: ~charge is charge, is only in relation to something else~. That was the basis I used in concluding that Freddi Sue and KST share the same view of electron/positron spin. But you are saying something in your GR shoe-horning that implies self interaction. I think I avoided "self interaction" by relying on charge relations. If you can apply +GR and -GR for e+ and e- it would remove self interaction but I couldn't divine that from your discussion. There is no +GR vs -GR that I used, unless you could be more specific. My POV is that electron/positron spin *number* is intrinsic to the ~structure~ but the orientation is a function of the dielectric background. Yes I agree. See the spin-orbit comments he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation The energy necessary to flip spins in an ensemble seems to support that notion. I can't, with any fidelity, translate your ascii array above to follow your discussion. It is a valiant attempt however. Just means charges (a) and (b) spin revolve twice as fast as the charge (+). This is where I 'accuse' :-) you of fence-sitting. You are using the word 'revolve' perhaps without intending, to describe a 2D entity. I am taking the position that a single electron or positron has nothing it can rotate or revolve. My POV is electron spin can't be described in terms of an axis through the particle. We allude to that description for what might more realistically be described as a motion of the electron's center established by neighboring entities which *do* have the spatial definiton to rotate. If we naievly assume an indivdual electron is spherical, is looks the same from any angle. It has no intrinsic axis but it does have a center. The quantum description imbues the electron with a pseudo-axis so it can mathematically represent its environment, even when mathematically severed from its environment. Using the term 'orbit' instead of 'revolve' seems just as incorrect but at least it describes motion *of* the center as opposed to motion *about* the center. You'll point out 'it is all relative anyway' and that is probably the source of the confusion. Your ~point~ of reference is slightly different and still retains the ability to assume a pseudo-axis, inherited from a QM description? ??? If revolve is something between rotate and orbit then I'll withdraw my charges of fence-sitting. The assumption of those embracing the simple point concept for an electron, and then whine that it has infinite density get what they want, GR flunks there...duh. The electron structure can be investigated by positrons. Indeed... And does the foregoing suggest that our failure to 'conjure' up particle-pairs in free space, might be beacuse positve ~stuff~ and negative ~stuff~ has a unique sub-fermion identity. Are nuclei really magnetic bottles that keep the positive ~stuff~ away from all the electons that fog up our normal space. Our particle accelerator knocks the positive stuff out of one magnetic bottle (the nucleus) and we catch it in another macro magnetic bottle. That notion dosen't bode well for possibility of virtual particles ever 'winking' into existance or the possibility of 'conjuring' particles pairs in nothingness but the witnesses those phenomena number about the same as witnesses to detection of gravity waves. ;-) Sue... Magnetic Bottle http://www.physics.miami.edu/~zuo/cl...igure27_17.jpg Hamiltonian_5 is the magnetic moment spin-spin interaction. The first term is called the contact interaction, because it is nonzero only when the particles are at the same position; the second term is the interaction of the classical dipole-dipole type. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation Ken ... |
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Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: FrediFizzx wrote: "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in message ... Paul's analysis is a bit ridiculous of charge self-energization, Purcell is clear on that on pg 8, charge is essentially relative and a single charge has no absolute or solitary existance, anymore than velocity does. What you can do is use 3 charges in a spatial configuration like, (+) (-)(-) within a radius of ~10^-18 m and simulate the characteristics of an electron, I use a computer simulation to do that. Ken, it is not quite that simple. It has to be all bound charge surrounding the (+) otherwise you will have a multipole config. FrediFizzx Yes Fred thanks. I reason the electron has intrinsic spin I'll diagram using (a) and (b) as negative charges, and cycles like, (+) (+) (b)(a) (a)(b) (+)........... (a)(b) (b)(a) (+) (+) (a)(b)......... yielding intrinsic spin and mass, and an associated characteristic frequency relating the rate of the spin (a)(b) to (+) that is the instrinsic spin, because they have a ratio of 1/2 as in the diagram as you can see. The "characteristic frequency" is E=h*f. That also provides the magnetic pole and the angular momentum, which is a multipole effect, and is evident in the super-conductive Cooper pair state. Fred, I should add that this is my personal working model that Edward asked about in his OP, FWIW, but I see no major problem making it Generally Relativistic based on the same theory that we posted at your site, http://www.vacuum-physics.com/KST/GR_Charge_Couple3.pdf What's unpopular about my approach is the use of nonsymmetrical metrics to model EM, but that's how I build an electron :-), to each his own. Ken S. Tucker, You earlier made a statement to the effect: ~charge is charge, is only in relation to something else~. That was the basis I used in concluding that Freddi Sue and KST share the same view of electron/positron spin. But you are saying something in your GR shoe-horning that implies self interaction. I think I avoided "self interaction" by relying on charge relations. If you can apply +GR and -GR for e+ and e- it would remove self interaction but I couldn't divine that from your discussion. There is no +GR vs -GR that I used, unless you could be more specific. My POV is that electron/positron spin *number* is intrinsic to the ~structure~ but the orientation is a function of the dielectric background. Yes I agree. See the spin-orbit comments he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation The energy necessary to flip spins in an ensemble seems to support that notion. I can't, with any fidelity, translate your ascii array above to follow your discussion. It is a valiant attempt however. Just means charges (a) and (b) spin revolve twice as fast as the charge (+). This is where I 'accuse' :-) you of fence-sitting. You are using the word 'revolve' perhaps without intending, to describe a 2D entity. I am taking the position that a single electron or positron has nothing it can rotate or revolve. My POV is electron spin can't be described in terms of an axis through the particle. We allude to that description for what might more realistically be described as a motion of the electron's center established by neighboring entities which *do* have the spatial definiton to rotate. If we naievly assume an indivdual electron is spherical, is looks the same from any angle. It has no intrinsic axis but it does have a center. The quantum description imbues the electron with a pseudo-axis so it can mathematically represent its environment, even when mathematically severed from its environment. Using the term 'orbit' instead of 'revolve' seems just as incorrect but at least it describes motion *of* the center as opposed to motion *about* the center. You'll point out 'it is all relative anyway' and that is probably the source of the confusion. Your ~point~ of reference is slightly different and still retains the ability to assume a pseudo-axis, inherited from a QM description? ??? If revolve is something between rotate and orbit then I'll withdraw my charges of fence-sitting. The assumption of those embracing the simple point concept for an electron, and then whine that it has infinite density get what they want, GR flunks there...duh. The electron structure can be investigated by positrons. Indeed... And does the foregoing suggest that our failure to 'conjure' up particle-pairs in free space, might be beacuse positve ~stuff~ and negative ~stuff~ has a unique sub-fermion identity. Yes, I think that's a reasonable hypothesis. Are nuclei really magnetic bottles that keep the positive ~stuff~ away from all the electons that fog up our normal space. Our particle accelerator knocks the positive stuff out of one magnetic bottle (the nucleus) and we catch it in another macro magnetic bottle. Nuclear physics is much more accessible to measurement than electron or proton structure and is a complex of those, so I think we're deviating. That notion dosen't bode well for possibility of virtual particles ever 'winking' into existance or the possibility of 'conjuring' particles pairs in nothingness but the witnesses those phenomena number about the same as witnesses to detection of gravity waves. ;-) Yeah, I think "virtual particles" is a mathematical interpretation that allows the concept of a field to exist...and that LIGO has been too quiet. Sue... Magnetic Bottle http://www.physics.miami.edu/~zuo/cl...igure27_17.jpg Hamiltonian_5 is the magnetic moment spin-spin interaction. The first term is called the contact interaction, because it is nonzero only when the particles are at the same position; the second term is the interaction of the classical dipole-dipole type. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation Thank you for the refs, did you want a naive comment? KST |
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#74
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Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: FrediFizzx wrote: "Ken S. Tucker" wrote in message ... Paul's analysis is a bit ridiculous of charge self-energization, Purcell is clear on that on pg 8, charge is essentially relative and a single charge has no absolute or solitary existance, anymore than velocity does. What you can do is use 3 charges in a spatial configuration like, (+) (-)(-) within a radius of ~10^-18 m and simulate the characteristics of an electron, I use a computer simulation to do that. Ken, it is not quite that simple. It has to be all bound charge surrounding the (+) otherwise you will have a multipole config. FrediFizzx Yes Fred thanks. I reason the electron has intrinsic spin I'll diagram using (a) and (b) as negative charges, and cycles like, (+) (+) (b)(a) (a)(b) (+)........... (a)(b) (b)(a) (+) (+) (a)(b)......... yielding intrinsic spin and mass, and an associated characteristic frequency relating the rate of the spin (a)(b) to (+) that is the instrinsic spin, because they have a ratio of 1/2 as in the diagram as you can see. The "characteristic frequency" is E=h*f. That also provides the magnetic pole and the angular momentum, which is a multipole effect, and is evident in the super-conductive Cooper pair state. Fred, I should add that this is my personal working model that Edward asked about in his OP, FWIW, but I see no major problem making it Generally Relativistic based on the same theory that we posted at your site, http://www.vacuum-physics.com/KST/GR_Charge_Couple3.pdf What's unpopular about my approach is the use of nonsymmetrical metrics to model EM, but that's how I build an electron :-), to each his own. Ken S. Tucker, You earlier made a statement to the effect: ~charge is charge, is only in relation to something else~. That was the basis I used in concluding that Freddi Sue and KST share the same view of electron/positron spin. But you are saying something in your GR shoe-horning that implies self interaction. I think I avoided "self interaction" by relying on charge relations. If you can apply +GR and -GR for e+ and e- it would remove self interaction but I couldn't divine that from your discussion. There is no +GR vs -GR that I used, unless you could be more specific. My POV is that electron/positron spin *number* is intrinsic to the ~structure~ but the orientation is a function of the dielectric background. Yes I agree. See the spin-orbit comments he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation The energy necessary to flip spins in an ensemble seems to support that notion. I can't, with any fidelity, translate your ascii array above to follow your discussion. It is a valiant attempt however. Just means charges (a) and (b) spin revolve twice as fast as the charge (+). This is where I 'accuse' :-) you of fence-sitting. You are using the word 'revolve' perhaps without intending, to describe a 2D entity. I am taking the position that a single electron or positron has nothing it can rotate or revolve. My POV is electron spin can't be described in terms of an axis through the particle. We allude to that description for what might more realistically be described as a motion of the electron's center established by neighboring entities which *do* have the spatial definiton to rotate. If we naievly assume an indivdual electron is spherical, is looks the same from any angle. It has no intrinsic axis but it does have a center. The quantum description imbues the electron with a pseudo-axis so it can mathematically represent its environment, even when mathematically severed from its environment. Using the term 'orbit' instead of 'revolve' seems just as incorrect but at least it describes motion *of* the center as opposed to motion *about* the center. You'll point out 'it is all relative anyway' and that is probably the source of the confusion. Your ~point~ of reference is slightly different and still retains the ability to assume a pseudo-axis, inherited from a QM description? ??? If revolve is something between rotate and orbit then I'll withdraw my charges of fence-sitting. The assumption of those embracing the simple point concept for an electron, and then whine that it has infinite density get what they want, GR flunks there...duh. The electron structure can be investigated by positrons. Indeed... And does the foregoing suggest that our failure to 'conjure' up particle-pairs in free space, might be beacuse positve ~stuff~ and negative ~stuff~ has a unique sub-fermion identity. Yes, I think that's a reasonable hypothesis. Are nuclei really magnetic bottles that keep the positive ~stuff~ away from all the electons that fog up our normal space. Our particle accelerator knocks the positive stuff out of one magnetic bottle (the nucleus) and we catch it in another macro magnetic bottle. Nuclear physics is much more accessible to measurement than electron or proton structure and is a complex of those, so I think we're deviating. Speak for youself. I may be a little kinky but your the first to call me a deviant. ) Are hydrogen atoms deviants too?That notion dosen't bode well for possibility of virtual particles ever 'winking' into existance or the possibility of 'conjuring' particles pairs in nothingness but the witnesses those phenomena number about the same as witnesses to detection of gravity waves. ;-) Yeah, I think "virtual particles" is a mathematical interpretation that allows the concept of a field to exist...and that LIGO has been too quiet. The Coulomb field can exist without them. and you can illuminate mirrors better that way too. Sue... Magnetic Bottle http://www.physics.miami.edu/~zuo/cl...igure27_17.jpg Hamiltonian_5 is the magnetic moment spin-spin interaction. The first term is called the contact interaction, because it is nonzero only when the particles are at the same position; the second term is the interaction of the classical dipole-dipole type. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation Thank you for the refs, did you want a naive comment? No... Let's gaze at pretty pictures instead. Theoretical estimates of the electron density for the first few hydrogen atom electron orbitals shown as cross-sections with color-coded probability density http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron Sue... KST |
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Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: [big snip]... Nuclear physics is much more accessible to measurement than electron or proton structure and is a complex of those, so I think we're deviating. Speak for youself. I may be a little kinky but your the first to call me a deviant. )Deviant! I saw your pix, you're a 3 sigma. Are hydrogen atoms deviants too? That notion dosen't bode well for possibility of virtual particles ever 'winking' into existance or the possibility of 'conjuring' particles pairs in nothingness but the witnesses those phenomena number about the same as witnesses to detection of gravity waves. ;-) Yeah, I think "virtual particles" is a mathematical interpretation that allows the concept of a field to exist...and that LIGO has been too quiet. The Coulomb field can exist without them. Ok and you can illuminate mirrors better that way too. Ok Magnetic Bottle http://www.physics.miami.edu/~zuo/cl...igure27_17.jpg Hamiltonian_5 is the magnetic moment spin-spin interaction. The first term is called the contact interaction, because it is nonzero only when the particles are at the same position; the second term is the interaction of the classical dipole-dipole type. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation Thank you for the refs, did you want a naive comment? No... Let's gaze at pretty pictures instead. Theoretical estimates of the electron density for the first few hydrogen atom electron orbitals shown as cross-sections with color-coded probability density http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron The gyromagnetic ratio is more relevent to this thread, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyromagnetic_ratio That's what I'm studying, to see if that indicates a non-point like structure within an electron. Ken |
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#76
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Ken S. Tucker wrote: Sue... wrote: Ken S. Tucker wrote: [big snip]... Nuclear physics is much more accessible to measurement than electron or proton structure and is a complex of those, so I think we're deviating. Speak for youself. I may be a little kinky but your the first to call me a deviant. )Deviant! I saw your pix, you're a 3 sigma. Are hydrogen atoms deviants too? That notion dosen't bode well for possibility of virtual particles ever 'winking' into existance or the possibility of 'conjuring' particles pairs in nothingness but the witnesses those phenomena number about the same as witnesses to detection of gravity waves. ;-) Yeah, I think "virtual particles" is a mathematical interpretation that allows the concept of a field to exist...and that LIGO has been too quiet. The Coulomb field can exist without them. Ok and you can illuminate mirrors better that way too. Ok Magnetic Bottle http://www.physics.miami.edu/~zuo/cl...igure27_17.jpg Hamiltonian_5 is the magnetic moment spin-spin interaction. The first term is called the contact interaction, because it is nonzero only when the particles are at the same position; the second term is the interaction of the classical dipole-dipole type. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breit_equation Thank you for the refs, did you want a naive comment? No... Let's gaze at pretty pictures instead. Theoretical estimates of the electron density for the first few hydrogen atom electron orbitals shown as cross-sections with color-coded probability density http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electron The gyromagnetic ratio is more relevent to this thread, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyromagnetic_ratio That's what I'm studying, to see if that indicates a non-point like structure within an electron. Good onya! That looks like a good effect to review in the context of particle-pairs to gain some insight to just what mechanism is in play that appears as a rotating extended object. I think I'll look for some pictures that might show a little more that toy tops. Something more descriptive must have fallen out of BNL's muon g-2 experiments. Sue... Ken |
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