Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-16 Thread Jones Beene
Robin and hydrino-philesphobes... In short the hydrino as a whole gets lighter as it shrinks. Theoretically speaking, could the additional mass-weight of these exotic hydrinos (approaching the limit of 137) be measurable on a macro scale? It is thus a mass loss rather than a gain, and would be

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-16 Thread Grimer
At 08:35 am 16/05/2005 -0700, Jones wrote: You cannot tell me with a straight that the hydrino MUST form a hydride, and can never form a dihydrino. Could he tell you if he had a full house or better still four of a kind? ;^) F.

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-16 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Jones Beene's message of Mon, 16 May 2005 08:35:20 -0700: Hi, [snip] Hey All this is true, but I think what Robin may be overlooking is **density** not atomic mass. Atomic Mass may be slightly less in the absolute, but density is another story altogether. Indeed, and you make

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-15 Thread orionworks
From: Robin van Spaandonk ... It's not a coincidence. It's the largest integer smaller than the inverse fine structure constant. The latter is important, because if the electron could shrink to exactly the inverse fine structure constant level, it would be traveling at the speed of light

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-15 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to [EMAIL PROTECTED]'s message of Sun, 15 May 2005 11:08:49 -0400: Hi Steven, [snip] However If one takes into account relativistic increase in the mass of the electron, then the maximum shrinkage level is even less than 137. How much less depends on which model one adopts. Seems to

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-14 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to Grimer's message of Fri, 13 May 2005 16:28:54 +: Hi, [snip] That number is 137 BTW, not 127. 137 is approximately the inverse of the fine structure constant. That's very interesting. Is that simply a co-incidence or is there some theoretical reason why the number of collapses

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-14 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to [EMAIL PROTECTED]'s message of Wed, 11 May 2005 17:29:20 -0400: Hi, [snip] I gather there has been some speculation that much of the missing mass recently detected in our universe might turn out to be nothing more exotic than hydrinos floating about in the deep recesses of outer

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-13 Thread Grimer
At 07:52 am 11-05-05 +1000, you wrote: In reply to [EMAIL PROTECTED]'s message of Tue, 10 May 2005 17:02:40 -0400: Hi Steven, [snip] It has been theorized that the electron circling the hydrino's proton nucleus might eventually transform the nucleus into a neutron if there have been a

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-11 Thread orionworks
Hi Robin, Thanks for the brief but concise tutorial concerning my questions on the progressive evolution of hydrino states. The graphics at your web site were helpful as well. I gather there has been some speculation that much of the missing mass recently detected in our universe might turn

Re: The seemingly circuitous behavior of hydrinos

2005-05-10 Thread Robin van Spaandonk
In reply to [EMAIL PROTECTED]'s message of Tue, 10 May 2005 17:02:40 -0400: Hi Steven, [snip] It has been theorized that the electron circling the hydrino's proton nucleus might eventually transform the nucleus into a neutron if there have been a sufficient number of fractional collapses of the