those crystals in lighters give off electrons when they're compressed. It should work with them no?
If so then all pumps, and turbines should be able to remake into electron pumps.
Is it possible to push electrons down a wire if a wheel applying pressure to the wire were rolled down it? Another way to cause the pressure would be to apply a heat source down the wire.
Ok then take two objects of equal mass in space. They fly at each other and hit a spring inbetween them. Energy is conserved because KE turns into PE. But for the time the objects are slowing down, stopped, and reaccelerating, their momentum is not conserved.
If momentum and KE is conserved, but KE can be conserved as PE like in a spring, then what happened to the momentum of the object after it hit the spring? It's not conserved like the KE is, and there's no term for potental momentum. KE and momentum must match up meaning where's there's some KE...
Ok momentum is not KE, but one can calculate the amount of KE stopping the object and measureing how high it raised a weight, or now much frictional heat it generated. If momentum would be a different number, then how do you measure it?
What is momentum? KE will also travel in the same...
I have an relevation. Where should I submit this, it has to do with quantum physic's of heat, and how that interacts with objects. How about this forum?
Ok wanted to be sure about that, now here's another question, or theory.
Could it be that on a quantum scale that it's a gyroscopic effect that is causeing the motor to work? A diamagnetic effect happens to the copper, but that effect happens as if B is an axis. So B causes a net "spin", or...
see this set-up for a DC Motor
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/magnetic/motdc.html
If the sides of the copper frame were the only copper in the field, the motor would still work correct? (stretch the copper frame out, or thin the magnets) So now we have only two sides of the...
My theory has to do with why homopolar motor/generators work. Does not explain other motors (yet). Here's a question. When a metal disc, let's say copper, spins the atoms spin that's for sure, but do the free floating electrons spin to? Free floating electrons are not bound to any atoms, but...