RE: [Vo]:About a March3 2010 thought experiment from Bernard Haisch

2010-11-28 Thread Jones Beene
-Original Message- From: mix...@bigpond.com ...but they claim they did look and didn't find. Can you point to a specific reference? If you're referring to a passing comment with no data, like no radioactivity was detected then that is of little relevance. Obviously, in some older

[Vo]:Fwd: part 20 is up

2010-11-28 Thread fznidarsic
Lane is really understanding this stuff and presenting strong arguments to prove what I have been saying. The concepts are simple everyday and profound when applied to the atom. The reviewer of my paper stated that it would be of great consequence if I derived Plancks constant from first

[Vo]:have my own blog in the UK thanks to Lane

2010-11-28 Thread fznidarsic
http://quantumtransition.com/?p=1#comments Frank Znidarsic

[Vo]:Double-Slit Explanation

2010-11-28 Thread Craig Haynie
Hello Frank! Have you seen this experiment: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delayed_choice_quantum_eraser Even if the math can be explained with classical equations, I don't see how a classical explanation can be forthcoming by analyzing the experiment through the Transitional Quantum State.

Re: [Vo]:About a March3 2010 thought experiment from Bernard Haisch

2010-11-28 Thread mixent
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Sun, 28 Nov 2010 07:13:44 -0800: Hi, [snip] -Original Message- From: mix...@bigpond.com ...but they claim they did look and didn't find. Can you point to a specific reference? I only have the paper itself to go on. Personally, I agree with you

[Vo]:Collecting Rydberg matter ?

2010-11-28 Thread Jones Beene
Poser: Rydberg states of hydrogen atoms are dense (far denser than osmium for instance) and long-lived in one way of looking at the situation (compared to Muons or other exotica, for instance) but the so-called radiative lifetime of a circular Rydberg state, n = 100 is approximately 1 second, it

Re: [Vo]:Collecting Rydberg matter ?

2010-11-28 Thread mixent
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Sun, 28 Nov 2010 15:33:53 -0800: Hi, [snip] Poser: Rydberg states of hydrogen atoms are dense (far denser than osmium for instance) and long-lived in one way of looking at the situation (compared to Muons or other exotica, for instance) but the so-called