Recent content by JMS61

  1. J

    High School Static electricity in outer space?

    How do we figure the static electric charge that our Earth can develop moving through space? Because we do move through space next to a star, how do we calculate the possible effect that this static electric charge is going to have on our planet surface?
  2. J

    High School Static electricity in outer space?

    Static electricity in outer space? Somewhere I read that a space vehicle traveling in outer space picks up a static electricity charge. Is this true and if it is true, where does that static electric charge come from?
  3. J

    Graduate Is measurable physics based on three things?

    It does help. Stephen Hawking's "black hole" math creates the possibility that measurable physics lies between two other "linear velocity ranges". Which is actually sort of impossible according to today's physics. And that we can only measure what is within our "linear velocity range". There...
  4. J

    Graduate Is measurable physics based on three things?

    Everything that goes through a "black hole" has no memory, which is impossible.
  5. J

    Graduate Is measurable physics based on three things?

    Everything that goes through a "black hole" Andy, ceases to be measurable physics.
  6. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    Ok, so color creates stability. Thank you! I have found a website called "Hyper Physics". I am going to have study it before I can continue to ask intelligent questions. But because I have studied it a bit so far, I actually understand what you are saying. Thank you again, you have given me...
  7. J

    Graduate Is measurable physics based on three things?

    Is measurable physics based on three things? Mass, the frequency of that mass, and the linear velocity that we consider measurable creation? Linear velocity is defined as something that is moving between some version of zero velocity (a hard black hole, Stephen Hawking's math) and light speed.
  8. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    Hypothetically if it was possible under certain circumstances to condense an electron field (cause it to take on mass), then there should be an example of it. A pion would be an example of it. The problem is that a pion is made up of quarks as is a proton and neutron. The pion eventually decays...
  9. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    Wikipedia:"leptons, comprising muons (μ−) and muon neutrinos (νμ); and the third is the tauonic leptons, comprising tauons (τ−) and tau neutrinos (ντ). Electrons have the least mass of all the charged leptons. The heavier muons and tauons will rapidly change into electrons through a process of...
  10. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    Either that or hypothetically there is such a thing as a heavy electron.
  11. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    Thank you cragar, and what I asked was a dumb question. I have been reading what wikipedia has to say about physics as was suggested by you guys and it is turning out that if one is not a physicist that one needs to do their home work before they as questions. It is also turning out that...
  12. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    Thank you RocketSci5KN, I guess that the reaction gives off two gamma rays. Now may I ask this question, "Is the local physics of a mass being accelerated by an outside source the same as the local physics of a mass being accelerated by an engine attached to the mass that is being accelerated?"
  13. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    Thank you, your patience with me is appreciated. Is there a place on the internet where I can go to find out the wave frequency of the photons that are generated?
  14. J

    Graduate Is Stephen Hawking's Black Hole Math Still Considered

    At what is generally considered the atmospheric pressure at sea level, distilled water freezes at 0 degrees centigrade every single time. Predictable physics always requires a defined environmental range. If the environmental range is not properly defined, then predictability goes out the...
  15. J

    Graduate Ouestion About the Matter Antimatter Reaction

    When an electron and a positron encounter each other we get a matter antimatter reaction. If we added the rest mass of the electron and the rest mass of the positron together and then divided that number by the number of photons that the reaction generated, what would we get for an answer?