In reply to Jones Beene's message of Wed, 13 Aug 2014 11:02:22 -0700: Hi, [snip] > >However, this deep orbital is only a few Fermi in distance from the nucleus. >The electron is relativistic and heavy when it gets there. Coincidentally, the >strong force it is 137 times stronger than electromagnetism, and if the strong >force were to exert a bit of extra pull on the electron in the last orbital, >then the electron becomes even heavier. The electron will then be able to give >up more energy on reinflation than it borrowed on redundancy.
Why wouldn't the extra energy be lost again when the electron eventually returns to a higher orbital? (Since it would have to escape the strong force again.) Regards, Robin van Spaandonk http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html

