Re: What is this "internal clock" in muon which slows down its rateof decay when they move very fast?
From: David Park (djmp_at_earthlink.net)
Date: 01/31/05
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Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 18:04:15 GMT
"Franz Heymann" <notfranz.heymann@btopenworld.com> wrote in message
news:ctljpc$o7r$1@hercules.btinternet.com...
> >
> > Geometry not mechanism.
>
> Yes
>
> Even though you are only a biologist, you are able to run rings about
> many of the folkk who post here regularly.
>
> Franz
>
Thanks, but I'm not really a biologist. I'm a retired electrical engineer
and computer programmer. I did spend some time consulting for a biochemist
studying cellular differentiation and worked two years in the Theoretical
Biology Group at NIH. Biochemists think in terms of substances and things.
What molecule causes this? What molecule causes that? They find in very
difficult to think in terms of dynamics or geometry. I ran into that quite
often, which is why I could relate to the poster.
David Park
djmp@earthlink.net
http://home.earthlink.net/~djmp/
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