Fred Sparber wrote:
Why/how Fred? (just curious on how one can measure any gravity effect at
all, upward or downward, on an electron)
A theory without an experiment to test it isn't worth much. Einstein won
his Nobel for
the photoelectric effect. Then after this Deification
they listened to his theories and ran some experiments. :-)
His theories of relativity you mean. Yes, indeed.
The evacuated hollow field-free vertical drift tube should allow the
electrons
to fall upward at 9.8 meters/sec^2.
I think they can be timed and their charge collected at the top.
How?
Designing experiments to test theories is not easy, you seem to be good
at
this.
Strictly "Thought Experiments", Michel :-)
You are too modest Fred, when I subscribed here you were running experiments
on electroniums with TV CRTs weren't you? Designing a real experiment
requires thought experiments anyway.
Michel
Fred
Michel
----- Original Message -----
From: "Frederick Sparber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "vortex-l" <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 12, 2006 2:35 PM
Subject: Re: Electrogravity & Proton Repulsion of Electrons
>A 2 meter tall evacuated vertical tube sitting atop or connected to
the
>sphere of a small Van De Graaff,
> might allow measurement of an upward gravity force on electrons if they
> can be
> detected without error, perhaps?