Monday, August 7, 2023

Brief summary of the concept presented in the book ‘MATTER (Re-examined)’ - 4

4. Most of the stable atoms may have resultant electric/magnetic fields about them that would help the formation of molecules. Those without resultant fields about them cannot form molecules. Larger atoms are formed by circular atomic sections arranged side by side along a central (atomic) axis. Most of the atoms are elongated-spherical in shape. Each atomic section is formed by two concentric discs (the inner disc formed by the nuclear section and the outer disc formed by the orbiting electrons). No part of an atom may be detached from a stable atom. In stable state, the nuclear and atomic axes coincide with each other. Misalignment between the atomic axis and the nuclear axis (of the same atom or those of neighboring atoms) produces resultant electric fields about them. Resultant distortion fields about the neighboring atoms compel them to align with each other so that the resultant distortion field about the group becomes nil. Such unions form molecules. Some materials, where full alignment cannot be achieved, exhibit resultant magnetic fields about groups of atoms. The angular difference between neighboring atoms from their natural stable alignments in a conductor is their electric potential. The electric potential difference between different points in a conductor produces resultant electric field about the conductor. The resultant electric field is the result of temporary structural distortions continuously maintained in the universal medium about a conductor. Electric current is the establishment of resultant electric fields in all planes perpendicular to the axis along a conductor. There are no translations of subatomic particles during an electric current. A hypothesis presented in the book ‘MATTER (Re-examined)’ can logically explain all physical phenomena in the universe. https://www.matterdoc.info. Please see the Table of contents of the book ‘MATTER (Re-examined) at https://matterdoc.info/matter/mattoc.pdf Nainan

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