On Tue, Oct 29, 2024 at 9:09 AM Alan Grayson <[email protected]> wrote:

 > If you think you're so smart, explain this: according to ME's,
> accelerating charges radiate energy. Why then do charges ostensibly at rest
> in a lab say, do NOT radiate energy even though the Earth is rotating, that
> is accelerating, causing those charges to accelerate? Can smartass, aka JC,
> explain this? AG


*First of all Maxwell's Equations are consistent with Special and General
Relativity but not with Quantum Mechanics, so all the charges that I'm
talking about must be macroscopic.  A real baseball is electrically neutral
but small (but not small by quantum mechanical standards) *
*parts of it **might be very slightly positive and other parts very
slightly negative, and this creates a small electric dipole. So if you
rotate the baseball those positive and negative parts will indeed radiate
electromagnetic waves, and the positive and negative parts will only
partially cancel out because they are in slightly different positions. So
the spinning baseball will start to lose energy and slow down. However the
radiated energy from rotating dipoles is proportional to the fourth power
of angular frequency, so if you were rotating the baseball at just under
the speed that would tear it apart, say about 2000 RPMs, that rotation is
so slow that the effect would be far too tiny to be detectable with today's
technology.  *

*John K Clark    See what's on my new list at  Extropolis
<https://groups.google.com/g/extropolis>*

*o5n*





>

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