So, my idea is still viable?   (:->)
Roger

Date: Wed, 5 Jun 2013 01:38:47 -0400
Subject: Re: [Vo]:I confess
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

Hi Roger, There may be transition range well below c but still very very fast 
by everyday experience which gives rise to the condition you imagine. I too 
have wonder if there is some connection between coulombic forces and 
speed...and frequency. 
 Harry   

On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 10:36 PM, Roger B <[email protected]> wrote:




Disappointing, Joe.  5% is just a little on the slow side, relativity speaking. 
  (:->)   I would not call 5% a data point.


Roger

> Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2013 19:24:42 -0700
> From: [email protected]

> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Vo]:I confess
> 
> Actually, Rutherford's gold foil experiment used alpha particles, 
> generated by Radon radioactive decay.

> 
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geiger%E2%80%93Marsden_experiment
> 
> According to http://www.epa.gov/radiation/understand/alpha.html and 

> http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Alpha_decay alpha particles 
> typically have an energy around 5 MeV which works out to be a velocity 

> of 5% that of light.
> 
> - Joe
> 
> On 6/4/2013 6:12 PM, leaking pen wrote:
>  > I do know that beta particles, used in the famous gold foil 
> experiments, are .75 c in vacuum, but often faster than c in other 

> materials.
>  >
>  >
>  > On Tue, Jun 4, 2013 at 5:26 PM, Roger B <[email protected]> wrote:
>  >
>  >     I confess to being an ignoramus.  I confess to having only a B.A. 

> in psychology, a B.A. in philosophy, and an A.S. in electronics 
> technology.  I am, however, a philosophical savant.
>  >
>  >     I have a question that I have asked several times but have never 

> gotten an answer.  By what means do conventional physicist probe and 
> understand the innards of the atom?  What is the minimum speed of the 
> particles that they shoot into the atom to see what is there?  Do they 

> ever use some version of light to understand the innards of the atom?
>  >
>  >     If, as I suppose, and I could be wrong, all of the particles 
> "shot" into the atom are traveling close to the speed of light, then 

> could not there be some unknown characteristic at this speed, perhaps as 
> yet unknown to us, that causes things inside the atom to behave 
> differently than from how they would behave if the probing particle were 

> going much slower.  For example, what if the almost light speed particle 
> had a bow wave in front of it as it flew through the aether?  If every 
> single particle that was used to probe the inside of the atom were 

> traveling at .99 the speed of light, then this "distortion" would be the 
> same in every experiment, and one aspect of this limited view inside the 
> atom we might call the "Coulomb Barrier".

>  >
>  >     Is this all possible?  Or am I off base?
>  >
>  >
>  >     Roger Bird
>  >     Colorado
>  >
> 
                                          

                                          

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