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Art Unwin wrote:
On May 6, 9:55Â*pm, wrote: tom wrote: On 5/6/2010 8:42 PM, tom wrote: On 5/6/2010 3:25 AM, Szczepan Bialek wrote: Charged particles can move at any speed from 0 to c and always produce the electric field. Why not? Incorrect. A particle has mass, and cannot attain light speed. tom K0TAR Should have said "charged particle" rather than "particle". tom K0TAR You were correct the first time. Nothing with mass can attain light speed and it doesn't matter if it is charged or not. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. Wrong. Spin produces the charge. Without spin you cannot achieve straight line trajectory as it will surely tumble. One must have the minumum mass possible to achieve the speed of light. A neutrino which translates into " little one" is the smallest particle known and thus can achieve the speed of light. If a particle smaller with respect to mass than that is found then the speed of light can obviously be exceeded. Einstein stated that the speed of light cannot be exceeded! Babbling gibberish. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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