absolute motion (2) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 Is a circular motion."planets" |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Absolute motion is the displacement with respect to a point in static and isotropic universal medium. |
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centrifugal force (3) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 Centrifugal force is not a force. It is the outward radial component of linear momentum |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 is the outward thrust that would occur upon a contained revolving orbital were it released from its container. - A spatial rotating central body bends exiting gravity which pushes orbitals leftward/counterclockwise. Orbitals are contained however by the net inward push of undiminished incoming vs diminished outgoing gravity beams. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 - Centrifugal force doesn't exist, but what is meant by it is just an expression of inertia. Explanation: If a force is exerted on a moving mass, under a certain angle (for example, a centripetal force, or any F = m a), a traject change occurs (for example an ellipse). Our Newtonian education demands for an action-reaction and then created a fictious reaction force (for example, a centrifugal force, or any -F = - m a). In fact, it is the expression of inertia that occurs, which is, according to my Coriolis Gravity Theory, a negative self-induction effect inside the matter itself. |
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charge (3) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 The measurement of the amount of symmetry generated on a given system. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Elementary charge corresponds to the mass of 186-ether. q^2 = m x r x 10^7 |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Is a geometric property and not a physical property. Neutron gain charge (Chadwick's experiment)and an electron loses charge (pair annihilation). Is charge a Hat? |
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constant (2) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 Is an independent variable with a precise value. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 A constant is unchanged even if the variables in the equation in which the constant appears, change. A constant may appear changed in an experiment. This change must be validated by listing all the variables. A missed variable will contribute to a change in the value of a constant. |
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dark energy (2) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 the 'new' aether |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 A Billy Bob visual effect physics for looting Money and Nobel prizes and no energy |
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electric charge (2) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 Electric charge is a fundamental quantity from which mass is derived |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Electric charge is the relative direction of distortions in an electric field. |
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electron (4) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 An electron is a type of photon and obeys the equation : q^2 = m x r x 10^7 |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Electron is a hexton with prominent south magnetic polarity and repulsive nuclear field, in addition to an electric field. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 A four-dimensional normal function fuzzy-dot that continuously bobs around an atom in specific ceremonial dances, or shoots through a wire as a current, or passes through the vacuum of a cathode ray tube, depending on how equations are used in the design of forms that utilize electrons and electric currents. Notably, the static electricity on the outer surface of a cathode ray tube; once it has been turned off the back of the hand brushing against the screen indicates a large number of electrons shot through the cathode ray tube may stick to the screen, built in feature or not. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 An electron is a vortex (spring shaped) wave. The "spring" diameter is what we perceive to be the size of the particle -- note the spring is hollow. When truly at rest, the spin axis aligns with the TIME dimension, thus its centerline is perpendicular to the Cosmic Onion-layers. The "handedness" of the twist of this wave is the same handedness as the INWARD waves that construct the Cosmic Onion standing waves -- thus electrons manifest NEGATIVE charge. Its wave length (aka Compton wavelength) is inversely proportional to its frequency and energy content = f*h (Planck's constant). As this vortex wave penetrates the Cosmic Onion-layers it is further curled up at the Planck time rate - thus one-second of its tightly twisted path length is 299,792.485 kilometers long. Thus the presence of this electron vortex slows the expansion of the Space-Now manifold -- THIS causes the manifestation of mass. m_e = h/c*lamda_e. As the Space-Now Manifold slides past the electron-wave their active/reactive interaction also creates a whirlpool around the electron. As this whirlpool penetrates the Cosmic Onion-layers it manifests as a spherical standing wave with ripples from its angular momentum manifest as the magnetic field and the dispersion in the spatial dimensions is its electric component. |
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energy (6) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 An imbalance in gravity |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Not real, but a concept that refers to the potential to redistribute movement. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Energy is a functional entity that represents stress formed in the universal medium due to any distortion (strain) in it. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 A static or dynamic distortion of the foamy ether. Energy can be converted from one ether distortion type to another, i.e. a particle (knot in the foamy ether) if undone, will convert to gamma rays (waves in the foamy ether). |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 In one word, interaction. An object has energy only by virtue of its relationship with other objects. Energy is the integral sum over all space of the interactions between the fields of the object (D and H) with the fields of all matter (E and B). Quantitatively energy density = D*E + B*H. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Energy is generally a local activity, and the essence of a local activity is motion. In order to remain local, that motion must be rotation or spin. The nonlocal subset is long range 'energetic' transmissions that contain and carry the local activity internally, usually as potential energy. |
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entropy (3) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 Entropy is the fictitious measure of disorder in nature. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Entropy has the same units as the Boltzmann constant, k namely Coulombs. k = 2Pi x 10^-7 x 137.036 x Q |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 The entropy of any system is the ratio of "interaction energy" (between the entities comprising a system) to "self energy" (of the individual entities taken separately). Physical entropy is scaled by Boltzmann's constant k. |
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field (6) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 A cloud of small finite forces. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 All fields are different manifestations of the electric field |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Field is a three-dimensional, distorted region in the universal medium. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 The accounting system required by Mach's Principle to track the location and movement of matter. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 The field is comprised of myriads of 186-ether particles. Other particles make waves in the ether field. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Fields are potentials. They are manifested as energy when they interact with matter. Therefore we do not see fields we see the result of fields such as the joining of the electric and magnetic fields to produce electromagnetic field energy. |
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force (6) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 Force is the action of electric field on an electric charge |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Force is a functional entity that represents the rate of work-done in relation to displacement. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 The measurement of how much distance a system having a given mass can travel in a certain amount of time. |
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2015-02-12 22:48:29 All forces are digital in nature, consisting of a continuous series of impulses delivered by particles of mass in motion. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Force is mass times acceleration. If the acceleration is due to gravity then the force is gravitational. Force is kelvin or absolute temperature. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 - A force is the interaction between 'light' (a graviton) that escapes from a particle (trapped 'light') and another particle's spin. The physical proces between both is described by a Coriolis effect. |
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gravitation (2) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravitation is the pressure exerted by the universal medium on an entity, present in a gap in it. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravitation is interactive attraction free from push or pull or action at a distance. |
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gravity (11) wikipedia | ||||
2015-02-04 08:19:23 A force that causes masses to move toward each other |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Is a force that causes objects to move toward each other |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravity is acceleration with units of meter per second squared. Voltage is gravity. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravity exists if and only if m = mass and r = location are none zero simultaenously. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 An accelerating inward flow of foamy ether. (Velocity at Earth's surface = -11.2 km/sec). Gravity from antimatter is an decelerating outward flow. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravity is a special case of gravitation when the main, bigger of the two mutually attracting bodies is earth or a heavenly body. See also the defintion of Gravitation. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravity is the average residual attraction of matter to other matter resulting from their electrostatic dipoles in random attitudes, at distances very large compared to the dipole spacing. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravity is pushing long wave radiation beams moving in all directions creating the structure of space. Their pressure is modified by masses. The net pressure produces 'attraction gravity', orbital motions (inertia), magnetism, the nuclear force, etc. |
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2015-02-04 08:19:23 Gravity is nature seeking to return atomic mass defects to the ground state giving two (equal) gravity couples; (1) the mass (energy)of body (A) seeking to replace the mass defect of body (B); and (2) the mass energy of body (B)seeking to replace the mass defect of body (A). |
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absolute motion (2) wikipedia | ||||
centrifugal force (3) wikipedia | ||||
charge (3) wikipedia | ||||
constant (2) wikipedia | ||||
dark energy (2) wikipedia | ||||
electric charge (2) wikipedia | ||||
electron (4) wikipedia | ||||
energy (6) wikipedia | ||||
entropy (3) wikipedia | ||||
field (6) wikipedia | ||||
force (6) wikipedia | ||||
gravitation (2) wikipedia | ||||
gravity (11) wikipedia |
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