That should be true if the electron acts as a point charge since we know the 
atom is stable.  Have you looked into relativity effects to see if they 
influence the electron radiation cancellation at ground state?  I wonder if 
time dilation might make a point charge appear as a continuous one under the 
right circumstances.  Of course....if the electron were in fact a continuous 
charge disc, etc. then the problem would also go away. ;-)


Dave  



-----Original Message-----
From: mixent <mix...@bigpond.com>
To: vortex-l <vortex-l@eskimo.com>
Sent: Mon, Mar 25, 2013 12:57 am
Subject: Re: [Vo]:Re: CMNS: only a perfect LENR theory should attack other 
theories


In reply to  David Roberson's message of Sun, 24 Mar 2013 23:26:56 -0400 (EDT):
Hi,
[snip]
>For the above reasons there would be no energy loss as a result of the current 
flow if it consisted of a continuous charge distribution orbiting a nucleus.  
That is not true for a point charge following the same path.

For orbits below the ground state it is even true of point particles, because
the change of angular momentum is less than h_bar. IOW it can't form a photon.
(At least in my  model ;)

Regards,

Robin van Spaandonk

http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html


 

Reply via email to