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Author Topic: can any of you answer this?  (Read 46778 times)

z.monkey

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #30 on: April 16, 2008, 07:07:59 PM »
Howdy Red Rider #22,

I told ya kid, your gonna shoot yer eye out!

The Earth is Hollow, no molten iron core down there...
Matter is energy moving in tiny little circles.
Energy is matter moving in straight lines.
Existence is made up of thought.
Nothing exists except that which you perceive.
Planet X is gonna get you, sucka...

Hahahhahhahhaaahahaa.....

Blessed Be Brother...

redriderno22

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #31 on: April 17, 2008, 01:05:16 AM »
sweet!

I hope its quick

and i have a beer in my hand
 ::) ::) ::) ::) ::)

triffid

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #32 on: April 17, 2008, 07:35:43 PM »
I was told we got the moon 4.5 billion years ago from the last planet x that hit us?Maybe the next planet x will give us another moon? Two beers for two moons!!!Triffid.

redriderno22

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #33 on: April 18, 2008, 12:59:38 AM »
how did planet x work its way in?

WilbyInebriated

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #34 on: April 18, 2008, 07:44:36 AM »
how did planet x work its way in?

z.monkey is yanking your chain... it's what he does ;)

redriderno22

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #35 on: April 19, 2008, 01:20:05 AM »
another question

how can you completely remove an electrical charge from an object?
say give it a positive charge?

zerotensor

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #36 on: April 19, 2008, 06:21:56 AM »
another question

how can you completely remove an electrical charge from an object?
say give it a positive charge?

If you want to completely remove all charge, you must convert the mass to pure photon energy.  In other words, annihilate it.

Of course, if you just want a net charge of zero, balancing positive with negative will do the trick.  Just don't go trying to mix positrons and electrons unless you want the former scenario.

redriderno22

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #37 on: April 20, 2008, 04:43:53 PM »
what about giving an object a negative charge?

redriderno22

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #38 on: April 22, 2008, 03:36:34 AM »
OK

ive got an idea for a simple experiment

tell me if its been done, or if there is evidence to prove otherwise.

first, is there a way to see a single atom? more closely its polarity?

ok now take one atom and look at it here on earth, then take that same piece of stuff and look at it on the space station?

to see if its polarity had changed?

i still think that gravity is a side effect of magnetism.

I know im wrong

bit ignorence is bliss  :o 8) ??? ::) :P

redriderno22

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #39 on: April 26, 2008, 04:58:20 AM »
does everything have a small magnetic field?


sm0ky2

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #40 on: April 27, 2008, 12:24:45 AM »
@ Loner - you're kind of close there....


everything is related to magnetism, and its effect on (itself?)

Magnetism exists in 2 forms. Equal and opposite - We have arbitrarily labeled them "N" and "S". But these labels dont mean anything. Think of them as simply opposite forces. Two halves of the nothing*[note] they split away from.  Together (in equal quantities) they become nothing once again.
All matter, and all forms of energy are derrived from these 2 forces in varying quantities.

Yes - all matter has a tiny magnetc field. We cannot observe its polarity, without actually changing said polarity by the act of observation. { because our instruments themselves have a magnetic field}.

The 3 elementary particles consist of several (micromagnets for lack of a better term). One being "N", one being "S", and the third being a combination of the two, that is either slightly "N" or slightly "S" - but to us it appears to be neutral, because the difference is too small to detect.

anti-matter is simply the "exact" opposite of the matter it destroys. - the two rejoin into nothing.
They must be in exact quantities for this to occur. [i.e. a lepton is only destroyed by its exact opposite]
all particles consist of several of these (micromagnets). for example - a quark is approx. 196 of them.
they polarize with respect to one another, forming the elementary particles that we observe.

a photon (which is what makes the effect we call "light") is not a physics piece of matter, but rather the effect of a localized magnetic fluxuation, resultant from a changing magnetic field of a piece (or pieces) of matter.
this changing field (photon) propegates in a single direction, and generally has a polarized orientation.
a stream of photons (beam of "light") may or may not be all polarized in the same direction.
[coherent/incoherent]

if we were to strike a particle with a photon, the field from the photon would actually become a part of the field the matter already has - increasing its strength. However, the matter cannot sustain a field larger than its own, so it will "let that photon go", or rather create new photonic disturbance which shoots off in another direction.

continued in next post........

sm0ky2

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #41 on: April 27, 2008, 12:38:01 AM »
So, is light magnetism ?  yes, it is.

is magnetism light? not necessarily....

magnetism is not a result of physical matter, but rather physical matter is a result of magnetism.

physical matter, could be said to not even exist. It is the effect of an invisible force field - like trying to press two opposing magnets together. what we "see" is the changes in the color of the "light" striking the physical matter. everything is the effect of tiny magnetic forces. VERY strong fields with respect to their size.

[ the magnetic field is said to decrease in strength with distance^2. - this is only correct with respect to a macro field.  else- a single atom would have a magnetic field several meters in diameter, and this is simply not the case. ]

How does this relate to gravity? --  the cummulative fields (macro field) of several atoms together creates a dual-field. magnetic AND gravitational. the gravitational being a unique type of distortion of the nothing.  Both results of the same magnetic force, but both very different in nature.  the magnetic attracts only its opposite force, and repels the like.
while the gravitational field attracts all other gravitational fields. - i say attracts, because that is the apparent observation, but in reality the two fields combine to create a lack of nothing between them.  The nothing then pushes the two gravitational fields towards one another.


[* Note --    NOTHING in the context of this posting is used to describe the universal magnetic-aether-mesh, the term nothing was substituted here out of respect for einsteinian mythologies]

sm0ky2

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #42 on: April 27, 2008, 12:49:18 AM »
for clarification - the magnetic field represented by a cummulation of matter, is not the same as the magnetosphere around the earth, the sun or certain other planets - that is actually an E-field, resultant from the earth molten core, and the superheated elements in the sun, ect.

the macro-magnetic field from matter is very small in comparison.
though- when it is polarized (like in a magnetic material) it can become larger.

redriderno22

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #43 on: April 27, 2008, 02:54:36 PM »
I have herd that if you take a large neo magnet and a rock of the same weight and drop them from the same height
the rock will hit first?

is this true?

sm0ky2

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Re: can any of you answer this?
« Reply #44 on: April 27, 2008, 09:57:53 PM »
hmm,.. i dont have any "large" neos to try this,. but it makes sense.. the magnet is travelling through the earths magnetic field. it may have some effect against gravity on the way down.