Path: ...!news.misty.com!weretis.net!feeder8.news.weretis.net!reader5.news.weretis.net!news.solani.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: Jan Panteltje Newsgroups: sci.electronics.design Subject: Re: relevation_physics Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2024 05:52:56 GMT Message-ID: References: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; ISO-8859-15 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Injection-Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2024 05:52:57 -0000 (UTC) Injection-Info: solani.org; logging-data="2284927"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@news.solani.org" User-Agent: NewsFleX-1.5.7.5 (Linux-5.15.32-v7l+) Cancel-Lock: sha1:kC6LYk9viMhWISNnsC3sv4NqzvM= X-User-ID: eJwNwgkRADEIBDBLvAvIobT4l3A3iSsYEwaH+f7kkXF2gwtONYVsU2J/cLGiQeTFuaCKyc1mXdH7ymlPzAcc1xSF X-Newsreader-location: NewsFleX-1.5.7.5 (c) 'LIGHTSPEED' off line news reader for the Linux platform NewsFleX homepage: http://www.panteltje.nl/panteltje/newsflex/ and ftp download ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/linux/system/news/readers/ Bytes: 2972 Lines: 39 On a sunny day (Tue, 25 Jun 2024 20:23:26 +0200) it happened Jeroen Belleman wrote in : >On 6/25/24 06:30, Jan Panteltje wrote: >> relevation_physics >> Was watching old video, early morning >> Thinking about why we cannot measure size of electron (still unknown) >> Then wondered if I could make something mechanical that would behave like electon, >> say 2 repel each other etc.. >> Thinking plasma, but hard to make. >> Then thinking magnets, but must be 3D. >> So a constructon of many magnets with say N poles tied together and south poles at the outside >> So then thought so much force needed to hold those north poles together.. >> Then 'relevation'!! BLACK HOLE >> at he center, much to do these days about femto scale black holes all over the universe.. >> Then construction, would I use needles for a demo ball made of thousand magnetic needles, >> like strings.. STRINGS shit oh man I'v got it. >> > >The size of the electron isn't entirely unknown. It's just that >different methods give different results. An electron isn't a >solid tiny billiard ball. It's a fuzzy thing, kind of hard to pin >down its size to a definite value. Much depends on how hard you >squeeze! > >Your ball of magnets isn't going to work. It would amount to >making a magnetic monopole. To our current knowledge, there is >no such thing. Reproducibly making or detecting magnetic monopoles >would be a Nobel prize achievement! Well, that nobble price is mostly political these days I think Several winners were jailed .. Why would a ball of magnetic needles not work and 2 with the same polarity not deflect? Simple table top experiment. Quite different from shooting 2 Teslas at close to supersonic speed into each other to find out how the chips in auto pilot work? ;-)