|
Post by 1dave on Apr 12, 2020 13:09:29 GMT -5
Quantum Mechanics Solved with Simplified Orbital Mechanics Enos Oye, Research Scientist - Jun 11, 2018 My new HERO! "The electron is not static, so why should we use the electrostatic force on the electron racing around the nucleus?The electrostatic force is the same as Columb’s force, it was set up by Columb playing with charged iron spheres, and measuring the electromagnetic forces between them. And Bohr took this electrostatic force and used it directly on the atom, and there it got stuck. But if we simply take the electrostatic force and divide it on the Bohr radius, then we get the true answer, and the correct version of the force between the nucleus and the atom: With this new simplified force we can rewrite Bohrs postulates so they fit with observed reality: So with a simple rewrite of the force between the electron and the nucleus quantum orbital mechanics can be solved with simplified classical physics. It even resulted in the simplest term of the fine structure constant, never seen before. Here is a full presentation: Quantum Mechanics Solved with Simplified Orbital Mechanics" Barycenters of ATOMS! No one else ever thought about them! - Dave
|
|
|
Post by mohs on Apr 12, 2020 13:21:42 GMT -5
Yo Dave ! in other words Eureka * * with further research the flaw will be found
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Apr 15, 2020 14:05:17 GMT -5
Enos Oye, Research Scientist Answered April 27, 2018 Do wormholes contain singularities? If we take the original one-way Einstein Rosen Bridge wormhole, it goes from a black hole at one point in space-time to a white hole another point in space-time. Something happens in a wormhole, things warp/accelerate beyond the speed of light and we then get faster than light backwards time travel. So we might say that the arrow of time turns in such a wormhole, and the turning point is the speed of light. At the speed of light we know according to general relativity that time stops and space contracts to zero. So there is a point in wormholes where there is no space and there is no time, and this point is the singularity. So when we picture a wormhole as a spacetime funnel, there is a point in the middle of the wormhole, without spacetime, so to pinch wormholes off with a point singularity in the middle is a good physical representation. For science fiction purposes a wormhole can still be pictured as a open wormhole portal where you run your spaceship through, just put in a moment of pure light blizz in the middle. Here is an illustration I made of a one-way wormhole, and I hypothesize that the singularity is also responsible for entanglement.
|
|
|
Post by Starguy on Apr 17, 2020 10:19:28 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Apr 17, 2020 12:35:38 GMT -5
BTW - Enos lives in Norway, so English is a second language.
|
|
|
Post by 1dave on Apr 18, 2020 3:16:35 GMT -5
|
|