Re: Electo London Gravity ?




"Significant Zero" <paulpsremove@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:1121551342.31027.0@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> "sue jahn" <susysewnshow@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:42d94c47$0$18640$14726298@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> |
> | "Significant Zero" <paulpsremove@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:1121535917.49077.0@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> | >
> | > |
> | > | That is the idea. Maxwell used a vortex of ether on a hunch. Except
> | > | for atoms, it *seems* arbitrary. Can we describe everyhing else but
> | > | atoms without something rotating. We *say* electrons have a spin,
> | > | but is it only because they exhibit the same force as a circulating
> | > | charge ? Can we truly detect anything rotating in a free electron?
> | > |
> | > |
> | >
> http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22free+electron+spin+resonance%22&spel
> | > l=1
> | >
> | > Perhaps the more fundamental question for me is can we detect anything
> | > rotating in an electric field between two well separated electrons or
> even
> | > protons. ?
> |
> | Sigh... you DO like that running before walking don'tcha?
>
> Just my boyish nature {:-) Which way would you like me to go ?
> Just a feeling but spin is an intrinsic property of particles but can be
> passed to the field (medium)

How ever would it do that? ::
<< In physics, spin is an intrinsic angular momentum associated
with microscopic particles. It is a purely quantum mechanical
phenomenon without any analogy in classical mechanics.
Whereas classical angular momentum arises from the rotation
of an extended object, spin is not associated with any rotating i
nternal masses, but is intrinsic to the particle itself. Elementary
particles such as the electron can have non-zero spin, even though
they are believed to be point particles possessing no internal structure.
The concept of spin was introduced in 1925 by Ralph Kronig, and
independently by George Uhlenbeck and Samuel >>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doublet_%28physics%29

Try this:
Moving the charges in a conductive loop clockwise can induce
relative motion between a free (+) (-) pair...

but

Is it possible for relative motion between a free (+) (-) pair
to induce circular motion of the charges in a conductive loop?

Surely the answer lies here:

<< There were two ways of connecting Mary's importance
to the solution. I found the easier clue that Mary Queen of
Scots and her cipher alphabet were important. Her birth and
death dates were written on the umbrella in the chapter "Party."
I looked at biographies of her life. When I read that she used
ciphers, I knew that she and her ciphers were central to the
puzzle.>>
ht tp://homepage.ntlworld.com/mparry/treasure/Solutions/treasure_in_search.htm


Sue...

So I expect electrons to have spin. I even
> expect Mesons if ever identifiable as a particle to have some type of spin
> but I could be wrong on this.
>
> |
> | Sue...
> |
> |
>
>


.



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