I am not going to fight with you, as I said it is YOUR thought experiment :)
But supposing you were right on this point, would it hurt to also know the
velocities and to have a quantitative measurement rather than a qualitative
one?
Michel
----- Original Message -----
From: "Frederick Sparber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, April 15, 2006 3:14 AM
Subject: Re: Electrogravity & Proton Repulsion of Electrons
It really doesn't matter what their velocities are, if enough for those
that arrive and get trapped in the Faraday cup collector charge a 0.1
picofarad
capacitor enough to get a measurable voltage off it with a DVM.
That should strongly suggest that gravity repels electrons.
Fred
[Original Message]
From: Michel Jullian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Date: 4/14/2006 5:22:38 PM
Subject: Re: Electrogravity & Proton Repulsion of Electrons
> If no such charge or current is detected, then gravity attracts
> electrons.
No Fred I disagree with your conclusion, there could be no electron
arriving
at 0.3s simply because they all had sufficient velocity to arrive
earlier.
Or there could be some, but gravity force is classically downwards and
they
were about to fall back
If you don't know the initial velocities you can't conclude, hence my
suggestion to use the "volunteers" whose initial velocity we know very
precisely (1/2*m*v0^2=h*nu-W) and can make as small as desired with a
retarding electrode (1/2*m*v0^2=h*nu-W-e*V), and whose flight time will
depend on the direction of gravity.
Michel
----- Original Message -----
From: "Frederick Sparber" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "vortex-l" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, April 14, 2006 9:59 PM
Subject: Re: Electrogravity & Proton Repulsion of Electrons
> Starting from scratch, Michel.
>
> Attractive forces acting on the electron at or near the earth's
> surface.
>
> 1, At the Bohr Radius 8.24e-8 newton
> 2, Attached to an H2O molecule 6.4e-11 newtons
> 3, The earth's fair weather field 2.0e-17 newtons
> 4, The earth's gravity field attractive 8.9e-30 newtons,
> 5, or could it be gravity repelled 8.9e-30 newtons?
>
> In the latter case, if it is released in an evacuated vertical
> tube the direction of force, 4, or 5, can be determined, provided
> the tube is virtually free of extraneous electrical fields.
>
> Shining a pulse of light on a Cs-CsO film on a silver-plated
> foil placed on the bottom of the tube and looking for
> arrival of the electrons about 0.3 seconds or so later
> (3.0 meters/sec or so) using a faraday cup tied to an electrometer
> capable of femto-coulomb or femto-ampere currents
> (and the LED or other Photon source) at the top.
>
> If no such charge or current is detected, then gravity attracts
> electrons.
>
> Fred