Actually, gravity is the weakest of the four fundamental forces. Ordered
from strongest to weakest, the forces are 1) the strong nuclear force, 2)
the electromagnetic force, 3) the weak nuclear force, and 4) gravity. If
you take two protons and hold them very close together, they will exert
several forces on each other. Because they both have mass, the two protons
exert gravitational attraction on each other. Because they both have a
positive electric charge, they both exert electromagnetic repulsion on each
other. Also, they both have internal “color” charge and thus exert
attraction via the strong nuclear force.

 Because the strong nuclear force is the strongest at short distances, it
dominates over the other forces at that small dimension and the two protons
become bound, forming a helium nucleus (typically a neutron is also needed
to keep the helium nucleus stable). Gravity is so weak at the atomic scale
that scientists can typically ignore it without incurring significant
errors in their calculations.

However, on astronomical scales, gravity does dominate over the other
forces. There are two reasons for this: 1) gravity has a long range, and 2)
there is no such thing as negative mass. Each force dies off as the two
objects experiencing the force become more separated. The rate at which the
forces die off is different for each force. The strong and weak nuclear
forces are very short ranged, meaning that outside of the tiny nuclei of
atoms, these forces quickly drop to zero. The tiny size of the nuclei of
atoms is a direct result of the extreme short range of the nuclear forces.
Two particles that are nanometers apart are far too distant from each other
to exert an appreciable nuclear force on each other.

If the nuclear forces are so weak for two particles only nanometers apart,
it should be obvious that the nuclear forces are even more negligible on
astronomical scales. For instance, the earth and sun are far too distant
from each other (billions of meters) for their nuclear forces to reach each
other. In contrast to the nuclear forces, importantly both the
electromagnetic force and gravity have infinite range and die off in
strength as 1/r2.
If both electromagnetism and gravity have infinite range, why is the earth
held in orbit around the sun by gravity and not by the electromagnetic
force? The reason is that there is no such thing as negative mass, but
there is such thing as negative electric charge. If you place a single
positive electric charge near a single negative electric charge, and then
measure their combined force on another, distant charge, you find that the
negative charge tends to cancel out the positive charge somewhat. Such an
object is called an electric dipole. The electromagnetic force caused by an
electric dipole dies off as 1/r3 and not 1/r2 because of this canceling
effect. Similarly, if you take two positive electric charges and two
negative charges and place them close together properly, you have created
an electric quadrupole. Almost without exception, the electromagnetic force
due to an electric quadrupole dies off even more rapidly, as 1/r4, because
the negative charges do such a good job of canceling the positive charges.
As you add more and more positive charges to an equal number of negative
charges, the range of the electromagnetic force of the system gets shorter
and shorter. The interesting thing is that most objects are made out of
atoms, and most atoms have an equal number of positive and negative
electric charges. Therefore, despite the fact that the raw electromagnetic
force of a single charge has an infinite range, the effective range of the
electromagnetic force for typical objects such as stars and planets is much
shorter. In fact, neutral atoms have an effective electromagnetic range on
the order of nanometers.

On astronomical scales, this leaves only gravity. If there were such a
thing as negative mass (antimatter has positive mass), and if atoms
generally contained equal parts of positive and negative mass, then gravity
would suffer the same fate as electromagnetism and there would be no
significant force at the astronomical scale. Fortunately, there is no
negative mass, and therefore the gravitational force of multiple bodies
close together is always additive. In summary, gravity is the weakest of
the forces in general, but it is the dominant one at astronomical scales
because it has the longest range and because there is no negative mass.

However, if we could create a structure that contains only one polarity of
spin, that structure would behave exactly like gravity in its effect  with
both gravity and EMF being of infinite range and additive in nature. A
selective template or mask enforces this spin selection process. This is
the essence and power of the monopole. This is at the taproot of LENR.



On Sun, Feb 1, 2015 at 7:15 PM, Eric Walker <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sun, Feb 1, 2015 at 3:56 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> In this way, the additive nature of gravity can transform this most
>>  feeble force in nature into a process that is so powerful that it can rip
>> space and time apart to produce black holes of gigantic size.
>
>
> Would you like salad dressing with that?
>
> Eric
>

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