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#1
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On Mar 23, 6:34*pm, Dave wrote:
Joe, I wanted a debate as to why adding a time varying field to a boundary enclosed static particles in equilibrium is illegal. your whole concept is malformed. *if the 'static particles' are in 'equilibrium' (i.e. not moving) and then you add a time varying field the particles are going to start moving and won't be in equilibrium any more... assuming of course the particles are charged or have a magnetic moment. This is in opposition to what the books say. which books. *quote titles and paragraphs and what you think you oppose in them. *i have given you my quotes as to why it is not necessary to add a time parameter to gauss's law and you ignore it. My whole theory lives or dies on how this is resolved. Nobody will provide technical details as to why this is illegal. then you better start hunting for a new theory. *i have provided you formulas in the past and you have ignored them... personally i don't think you even understand the concepts and have probably ignored me on purpose just so you can continue to blather on to get more attention. As i said before, if you do not accept the laws of physics then we cannot debate physics Probably the best thing to happen for both of us! You can take a horse to the water trough but you can't make it drink. Especially when it puts his arse to the front and lets loose with hot air.Your last statement shows all who you are and what you are. Free speech can have its price. |
#2
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Art Unwin wrote:
On Mar 23, 6:34 pm, Dave wrote: Joe, I wanted a debate as to why adding a time varying field to a boundary enclosed static particles in equilibrium is illegal. your whole concept is malformed. if the 'static particles' are in 'equilibrium' (i.e. not moving) and then you add a time varying field the particles are going to start moving and won't be in equilibrium any more... assuming of course the particles are charged or have a magnetic moment. This is in opposition to what the books say. which books. quote titles and paragraphs and what you think you oppose in them. i have given you my quotes as to why it is not necessary to add a time parameter to gauss's law and you ignore it. My whole theory lives or dies on how this is resolved. Nobody will provide technical details as to why this is illegal. then you better start hunting for a new theory. i have provided you formulas in the past and you have ignored them... personally i don't think you even understand the concepts and have probably ignored me on purpose just so you can continue to blather on to get more attention. As i said before, if you do not accept the laws of physics then we cannot debate physics Probably the best thing to happen for both of us! You can take a horse to the water trough but you can't make it drink. Especially when it puts his arse to the front and lets loose with hot air.Your last statement shows all who you are and what you are. Free speech can have its price. Once again, you throw insults when the discussion does not go your way. I'm not sure you even know who you replied to. As far as folks not debating you, first present your position in a clear way with the appropriate math and equations. Allow others to try to understand your way of thinking. To date, you have not provided the kind of detail necessary for the kind of debate you would like. As I said before, just adding "+t" to an equation does not make it right. If I've interpreted your position wrong, then it is because you have not clearly expressed it. The ball, as it has always been, is in your court. It is not a matter of accepting the laws of physics. It is what you do with/to them that may be the problem. If you want to discuss physics, present your case the way those knowledgeable in the field would do. |
#3
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On Mar 23, 7:46*pm, joe wrote:
Art Unwin wrote: On Mar 23, 6:34 pm, Dave wrote: Joe, I wanted a debate as to why adding a time varying field to a boundary enclosed static particles in equilibrium is illegal. your whole concept is malformed. *if the 'static particles' are in 'equilibrium' (i.e. not moving) and then you add a time varying field the particles are going to start moving and won't be in equilibrium any more... assuming of course the particles are charged or have a magnetic moment. This is in opposition to what the books say. which books. *quote titles and paragraphs and what you think you oppose in them. *i have given you my quotes as to why it is not necessary to add a time parameter to gauss's law and you ignore it. My whole theory lives or dies on how this is resolved. Nobody will provide technical details as to why this is illegal. then you better start hunting for a new theory. *i have provided you formulas in the past and you have ignored them... personally i don't think you even understand the concepts and have probably ignored me on purpose just so you can continue to blather on to get more attention. As i said before, if you do not accept the laws of physics then we cannot debate physics Probably the best thing to happen for both of us! You can take a horse to the water trough but you can't make it drink. Especially when it puts his arse to the front and lets loose with hot air.Your last statement shows all who you are and what you are. Free speech can have its price. Once again, you throw insults when the discussion does not go your way. I'm not sure you even know who you replied to. As far as folks not debating you, first present your position in a clear way with the appropriate math and equations. Allow others to try to understand your way of thinking. To date, you have not provided the kind of detail necessary for the kind of debate you would like. As I said before, just adding "+t" to an equation does not make it right. If I've interpreted your position wrong, then it is because you have not clearly expressed it. The ball, as it has always been, is in your court. It is not a matter of accepting the laws of physics. It is what you do with/to them that may be the problem. If you want to discuss physics, present your case the way those knowledgeable in the field would do. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Well you can discuss your ideas on physics with David. There are also some on the group who obviously understand classical physics. So you have a choice of a sensible discussion on physics as well as a discussion of your idea of physics. I await on the side lines with interest to see what choice you make! |
#4
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On 3/23/2010 8:10 PM, Art Unwin wrote:
On Mar 23, 7:46 pm, wrote: If you want to discuss physics, present your case the way those knowledgeable in the field would do. xxxxxxxxxxxxxx Well you can discuss your ideas on physics with David. There are also some on the group who obviously understand classical physics. So you have a choice of a sensible discussion on physics as well as a discussion of your idea of physics. I await on the side lines with interest to see what choice you make! And Art, as usual, waits on the side defined by fantasy. tom K0TAR |
#5
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![]() "joe" wrote ... Art Unwin wrote: On Mar 23, 6:34 pm, Dave wrote: Joe, I wanted a debate as to why adding a time varying field to a boundary enclosed static particles in equilibrium is illegal. As I said before, just adding "+t" to an equation does not make it right. If I've interpreted your position wrong, then it is because you have not clearly expressed it. Art's antennas radiate from the ends. There are charges but they are not static. Gauss flux is for staic charge. If you add "+t" the flux will be the oscillating flux. G3LHZ went to conclusion that antennas are source/sink. The same did Art. Am I right, Art? In such case particles (electrons?) oscillate also. But the waves consist of oscillating "particles". Maxwell's waves consist of rotating oscillations, Art's are longitudinal. The ball, as it has always been, is in your court. It is not a matter of accepting the laws of physics. It is what you do with/to them that may be the problem. If you want to discuss physics, present your case the way those knowledgeable in the field would do. Art write too long posts. S* |
#6
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On Mar 24, 12:46*am, joe wrote:
Art Unwin wrote: On Mar 23, 6:34 pm, Dave wrote: Joe, I wanted a debate as to why adding a time varying field to a boundary enclosed static particles in equilibrium is illegal. your whole concept is malformed. *if the 'static particles' are in 'equilibrium' (i.e. not moving) and then you add a time varying field the particles are going to start moving and won't be in equilibrium any more... assuming of course the particles are charged or have a magnetic moment. This is in opposition to what the books say. which books. *quote titles and paragraphs and what you think you oppose in them. *i have given you my quotes as to why it is not necessary to add a time parameter to gauss's law and you ignore it. My whole theory lives or dies on how this is resolved. Nobody will provide technical details as to why this is illegal. then you better start hunting for a new theory. *i have provided you formulas in the past and you have ignored them... personally i don't think you even understand the concepts and have probably ignored me on purpose just so you can continue to blather on to get more attention. As i said before, if you do not accept the laws of physics then we cannot debate physics Probably the best thing to happen for both of us! You can take a horse to the water trough but you can't make it drink. Especially when it puts his arse to the front and lets loose with hot air.Your last statement shows all who you are and what you are. Free speech can have its price. Once again, you throw insults when the discussion does not go your way. I'm not sure you even know who you replied to. As far as folks not debating you, first present your position in a clear way with the appropriate math and equations. Allow others to try to understand your way of thinking. To date, you have not provided the kind of detail necessary for the kind of debate you would like. As I said before, just adding "+t" to an equation does not make it right. If I've interpreted your position wrong, then it is because you have not clearly expressed it. The ball, as it has always been, is in your court. It is not a matter of accepting the laws of physics. It is what you do with/to them that may be the problem. If you want to discuss physics, present your case the way those knowledgeable in the field would do. he wants to take gauss's law for the flux through a surface containing charges and add a time dependency to it. the argument against that is that the equation is already good at any time, it doesn't need to have a time dependency since it is true at any instant anyway. |
#7
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joe wrote:
As far as folks not debating you, first present your position in a clear way with the appropriate math and equations. Allow others to try to understand your way of thinking. To date, you have not provided the kind of detail necessary for the kind of debate you would like. New here eh, Joe? Homie don't play that. I think it has something to do with the old saying" If I have to explain it to you, You aren't capable of understanding it." - 73 de Mike N3LI - |
#8
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Michael Coslo wrote:
joe wrote: As far as folks not debating you, first present your position in a clear way with the appropriate math and equations. Allow others to try to understand your way of thinking. To date, you have not provided the kind of detail necessary for the kind of debate you would like. New here eh, Joe? Not at all. Just trying to get Art to explain himself. If he really wanted to discuss his ideas he had the opportunity. However, his responses make it clear he really has no desire for a constructive discussion. Homie don't play that. I think it has something to do with the old saying" If I have to explain it to you, You aren't capable of understanding it." - 73 de Mike N3LI - |
#9
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On 3/23/2010 7:20 PM, Art Unwin wrote:
your whole concept is malformed. if the 'static particles' are in 'equilibrium' (i.e. not moving) and then you add a time varying field Equilibrium does not mean not moving. I won't go any deeper since you have problems with things complex and go into babble mode when confronted with them. tom K0TAR |
#10
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On Mar 24, 2:22*am, tom wrote:
On 3/23/2010 7:20 PM, Art Unwin wrote: your whole concept is malformed. *if the 'static particles' are in 'equilibrium' (i.e. not moving) and then you add a time varying field Equilibrium does not mean not moving. I won't go any deeper since you have problems with things complex and go into babble mode when confronted with them. tom K0TAR oh, so you understand art's concept of 'static' and 'equilibrium' enough to argue that side of it?? how do you 'equilibrium' and 'static particles' unless they aren't moving? equations please, show your work, extra points for deriving how his magical levitating diamagnetic neutrino fits into the equations. please, we need someone who can fill in the gaps that art can't seem to do. |
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