Search found 1288 matches

by bperet
Sat Sep 16, 2006 12:35 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: Atomic Energy Levels
Replies: 8
Views: 13093

Old thoughts on Energy Levels

I recently received this email from Nehru, and am posting it to the RS2 forum in case others have some ideas regarding the Energy Levels in the RS. I have also attached the paper mentioned (MS Word document). KVK Nehru wrote: Bruce, Gopi You know Sarada has been working on the problem of Energy leve...
by bperet
Fri Sep 15, 2006 11:59 am
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: Why do they gravitate?
Replies: 36
Views: 50933

Re: Why do they gravitate?

Horace wrote: Do you have an intuitive understanding why two atoms gravitate in space? Funny you should mention this... I was just pointing out an abnormality with gravity to Phil and Gopi yesterday. Consider that there are three, basic "field effects": the electric field, the magnetic fi...
by bperet
Thu Aug 24, 2006 10:13 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: Positrons and Electrons
Replies: 11
Views: 19078

The Exciton

bperet wrote: The result: paired electrons can come in two "flavors" also: uncharged (behaving as a photon) and charged (behaving as a charged electron). I just found out, courtesy of the RS2 identification of the legacy science "hole" with the uncharged electron, that this comb...
by bperet
Thu Aug 24, 2006 9:59 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: RS2 Postulates
Replies: 12
Views: 21035

RS2 Postulates

MWells wrote: Gopi wrote: Had we been in the time-region universe, motion within the unit of space, we would perceive the world as Euclidean still, but now the outside space/time region appears as polar-Euclidean. I don't see why the space/time region would not appear as Euclidean. After all, space...
by bperet
Thu Aug 24, 2006 9:48 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: RS2 Postulates
Replies: 12
Views: 21035

RS2 Postulates

MWells wrote: "In a Euclidean reference frame, the physical universe conforms to the relations of ordinary, commutative mathematics and its magnitudes are absolute." That might be a better way to state it, because it is known that the polar operators, i, j and k, are NOT commutative, so t...
by bperet
Wed Aug 23, 2006 1:54 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: Positrons and Electrons
Replies: 11
Views: 19078

Re: Pentagen

Eccles wrote: Does RS/RS2 allow for Hydrogen 5 ("Pentagen" with half-life of 0.34 second) and Hydrogen 4 (uncaptured to-date)? No, not as an isotope of an atom. The maximum isotopic mass for an atom is 4Z-1, and for Z=1 would be 3, tritium. See the "Gravitational Charge" article...
by bperet
Sun Aug 20, 2006 4:44 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: Positrons and Electrons
Replies: 11
Views: 19078

Positrons and Electrons

<t>In RS2, the electron is just another name for the cosmic positron and has speed of 2/1 in one scalar dimension. Being cosmic, it has no fixed location in the material sector and appears more as a wave function than a point particle. Yet, we observe electrons as point particles… why?<br/> <br/> Al...
by bperet
Sat Aug 19, 2006 6:19 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: Electricity
Replies: 23
Views: 35782

Electricity

Rainer Huck of ISUS has, for quite some time, been promoting the idea that "voltage" is the ratio between the number of charged and uncharged electrons in a conductor. I looked into that idea when he originally presented it to me at the ISUS Conference in 1996, but have never come up with ...
by bperet
Thu Aug 17, 2006 5:40 pm
Forum: Presentations
Topic: RS2 Presentation, Part 1
Replies: 11
Views: 43020

HTML versions of presentations

Using OpenOffice (which is actually a lot nicer than PowerPoint, IMHO), I converted the presentation to HTML: http://rs2.antiquatis.org/presentation/rs2-1/ I was thinking of updating it to include a voice track to explain each slide, kind of like an on-line lecture series. I can make space available...
by bperet
Thu Aug 17, 2006 5:18 pm
Forum: General Discussion
Topic: Rotation versus Rotational Vibration
Replies: 14
Views: 22026

Rotation versus Rotational Vibration

Gopi wrote: Translation: Primary motion with a variation in length Rotation: Primary motion with a variation in turn Mike may have come up with a good term in the Reciprocal Philosophy forum, as two different types of translation: Primary motions: 1. Linear translation: linear movement, as commonly...