Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
What is a free electron, i.e. as used in an x-ray tube? Good question! Live - all the chemistry that forms/carries it - happens between the electron and the proton (inside nuclei). So we stay in between. Physically a free electron behaves like a fat photon with a locked in wave that is

Re: [Vo]:Many years later...

2021-02-26 Thread Jed Rothwell
Don't fret about it. We have thick skin in this business. Welcome back! On Mon, Feb 22, 2021 at 10:10 PM Kyle Mcallister wrote: > Hello again, Vortexians. > > It's been a long time, perhaps 10 years or so since I've been here. I > can't recall exactly, but that was another life. You'd be

Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Sat, 27 Feb 2021 00:28:36 +0100: Hi Jürg, Next question. Can a "fat photon" bind to a proton resonance? IOW are you sure the "fat photon" loses it's identity/internal structure when bound in an atom? >What is a free electron, i.e. as used in an x-ray

Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Michael Foster
Jones, your comment made me laugh out loudGlad someone still has a sense of humor in these times. On Thursday, February 25, 2021, 04:45:27 PM GMT+1, JonesBeene wrote: Could it really be that simple?

RE: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread bobcook39...@hotmail.com
Jpones— I do not consider it is that simple! Bob Cook PS: However I applaud Axil’s work to simplify the SM. BC From: JonesBeene Sent: Thursday, February 25, 2021 7:45 AM To: vortex-l@eskimo.com Subject: RE: [Vo]:How the Holmlid

Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
The electron is an exact resonance of the proton. We can calculate all electron properties from the proton properties. This is how nature works along magnetism. J.W. On 26.02.2021 08:20, Robin wrote: In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Fri, 26 Feb 2021 01:49:49 +0100: Hi, [snip] All

Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Fri, 26 Feb 2021 20:05:31 +0100: Hi, [snip] >No the electron has no stable strong force radius. > >You can only measure the electron g-factor, where as you can get it from >a metric transformation from the proton strong force equation. > >Physics will

[Vo]:"Ash" analysis options for the amateur

2021-02-26 Thread Kyle Mcallister
Vortexians, Having worked in the automotive industry for a long time, I've encountered various things that can be of use to the amateur scientist. A lot of them are not applicable here, but one that came back to mind the other day I thought I should put out there, and maybe you guys can offer

Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Robin
In reply to Jürg Wyttenbach's message of Fri, 26 Feb 2021 14:06:39 +0100: Hi, [snip] >The electron is an exact resonance of the proton. We can calculate all >electron properties from the proton properties. > >This is how nature works along magnetism. > > >J.W. Does that mean you could also

Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Axil Axil
The equation of a Light Leptonic Magnetic Monopole and its Experimental Aspects Georges Lochak Urutskoiev produces a boatload of math that shows in part that the EVO is a tachyon. This is a smoking gun for tachyonic condensation which shows in detail the inner structure of the EVO. This is the

Re: [Vo]:How the Holmlid mechanism works

2021-02-26 Thread Jürg Wyttenbach
No the electron has no stable strong force radius. You can only measure the electron g-factor, where as you can get it from a metric transformation from the proton strong force equation. Physics will change. More radically as some will like. J.W. On 26.02.2021 19:54, Robin wrote:a In reply