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Ampere's law derives speed; is magnetic current density rest-mass? Chapt13.4.05 spin #1031 New Physics #1151 ATOM TOTALITY 5th ed
Posted:
Nov 25, 2012 1:02 AM
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Alright, the speed of light is c = 1/ sqrt(permeability*permittivity)
Now the permeability and permittivity are found in Ampere's law, not the Faraday law. And I should have known that since Maxwell went ahead and appended the displacement current onto the Ampere law.
So we see here, that the spin of a particle of physics and the speed of a particle of physics derives as a secondary feature of the Ampere law of Maxwell Equations.
That leaves just rest-mass. Is it a secondary feature due to the actions of the Faraday law of the Maxwell Equations? Is the magnetic current density just another name for the rest-mass of particles?
Google's New-Newsgroups censors AP posts and halted a proper archiving of author, but Drexel's Math Forum does not and my posts in ?archive form is seen here:
http://mathforum.org/kb/profile.jspa?userID=499986
Archimedes Plutonium http://www.iw.net/~a_plutonium whole entire Universe is just one big atom where dots of the electron-dot-cloud are galaxies
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