Re: Protons & electrons attractions
- From: "newedana" <simplesong1004@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 20 Apr 2005 18:00:17 -0700
>Did you ever hear the persistent current flowing through a closed
circuit of superconductor? It really can flow permanently as far as the
conductor keeps its superconductivity. According to Dr. Yoon's new text
book (www. yoonsatom. net), this persistent current is automatically
induced in the superconductor that is exposed in an external magnetic
field. However, this persistent current induces an intensive magnetism
that acts always diamagnetic effect against extenal magnetism, so the
super conductor turns out to float upon external magnetic pole, due to
repulsion between them. This phenomen is allgedly called Meissoner's
diamagnetic effect. The orbital electron orbiting around its nucleus is
a kind of persistent current though tiny, because the atomic space is
an ideally perfect vacuum so the space becomes a room temperature
superconductor for moving electrons. That is why orbital electron does
not fall to its nucleus and can perform its orbiting motion
permanently.
Why this electron doesn't fall to proton when they even meet freely?
For example, an alpha particle from radioactive elments builds a helium
atom getting two free electrons without merging together. Dr.Yoon
assumed in his book that helium nucleus must provide a magnetic field
for the free electrons to build a persistent current around it.
newedana
.
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