Anatomy of Electromagnetic Waves

More
13 years 8 months ago #21152 by Jim
Reply from was created by Jim
Bart, If the mass of the atom increases with motion as you claim it does can you tell me how the extra mass is managed by the atom? Do the protons get heavy and if so by how much?

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
13 years 8 months ago #21153 by Bart
Replied by Bart on topic Reply from
In the topic above, I referred to the energy absorbed by the electrons in the orbitals around a nucleus.
The extra energy (provided through an external EM wave in the form light, ...) goes into the extra pair of 'aether wheels'.
The extra mass is the mass contained in the additional 'aether wheels'.
The closed loop formed by these 'aether wheels' forces all wheels to kept bound around the atom.

Accelerating the atom will not increase its weight, but the extra mass contained in the extra pair of 'aether wheels' will need to be accelerated along with the rest of the atom.

There must be a similar mechanism that applies to the nucleus of an atomn.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
13 years 8 months ago #24299 by Jim
Replied by Jim on topic Reply from
Hi Bart, You might need some help with this, but, you are thinking which is refreshing. The concept is interesting although in my world the electron doesn't exist other than in models. Mass and weight are not the same thing either.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
13 years 8 months ago #21154 by Bart
Replied by Bart on topic Reply from
Jim, I fully agree:
1. The Electron is not an 'object' but more of a cloud of which the shape and density are defined by the wave function. Electrons are not 'small' either: the electron cloud can pass through two parallel slits, thereby creating an interference pattern through the recombination of the resulting subclouds.
2. I indeed can't continue to develop the proposed concepts myself in the limited spare time I have available (and I have little interest to open my Math books which are dated more than 25 years ago). I can only hope others will investigate and further develop the proposed models (which is a reason for me to post my thoughts on this forum).

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Time to create page: 0.331 seconds
Powered by Kunena Forum