Re: Interstellar Propulsion idea using an Asteroid and a few comets!

From: John Thingstad (john.thingstad_at_chello.no)
Date: 09/06/04


Date: Tue, 07 Sep 2004 00:33:27 +0200

On Sun, 05 Sep 2004 17:09:30 -0500, Paul F. Dietz <dietz@dls.net> wrote:

Nop, sorry.
It is the weak interaction with mass which is dominant.
The mass has nothing to do with it.
Look into Calusa/Clein theory of closed force.
It is the ease of interaction with external objects that determines veter
a force is strong or not.
As you know there are two local exchange particles W (strong force) and Z
(weak force, nuclear decay),
and two nonlocal forces electromagnetism (photon) and gravity (graviton).

For a more in depth discussion which is beyond our space here I suggest:

Quantum field theory by Lewis H. Ryder

> John Thingstad wrote:
>
>> Actually you got it exactly wrong. The particles move throgh a Higgs
>> field.
>> The mass of the particle is inversely proportional to the strength of
>> the
>> force. So a graviton is in fact the most massive particle there is.
>
> Gee, is that why gravity has unlimited range?
>
> Sounds like you're spouting bull***, Mr. Thingstad.
>
> Paul

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