pioneer Posted September 21, 2007 Share Posted September 21, 2007 One implication, with respect to the neutron having both negative and postive components, is that the proton and electron, from which it formed its are more or less conserved within the structure of the neutron. Neutrons can decompose into protons and electrons. It also suggests that the surface negative charge of the neutron plays a role in overcoming the repulsion between protons within nuclei. One way to look at this is to also consider magnetic addition. If the inner and outer halves of the negative charge are moving in opposite directions they will attract magnetic fields. If the positive charge of the neutron follows the inside negative half, then these two magnetic field will attract but it will repel the outside, so the outside negative is able to interact while also playing its role in cancelling out the positive charge. If we add the circulation of protons, via nuclear orbitals, so their magnetic fields attract each other, as well as to the negative neutron surface, nuclear repulsion could lower fruther. One observation that suggests nuclear orbitals, are electron orbitals. It would make sense the nuclei are helping to induce or are being induced by these electron orbital shapes. Electron orbitals may also induce the negative surface of the neutron. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
elas Posted September 22, 2007 Share Posted September 22, 2007 Pioneer Neutrons can decompose into protons and electrons. You missed out -and neutrino or positron Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pioneer Posted September 22, 2007 Author Share Posted September 22, 2007 If the neutron has a negative on the inside and the outside, then it implies one of two things; First, negative charge is a binary entity being composed of two 1/2 negative charges. In close proximity of positive charge, such as within a neutron, these are able to separate into two. The second is, a single negative charge can appear both inside and outside the positive charge of the neutron, without having to split. Picture a ring, which is in the horizontal plane. Next we add another larger ring, that is perpendicular, linked to the first like a chain. The second ring goes through the center of the first, and being larger is also further outside. The positive charge is the smaller horizontal ring and the negative charge is the larger circulation of the vertical ring. The entire two-ring arrangement is moving as the positive charge ring fills in 3-D. The result will be the negative charge on the inside and outside. The positive charge will spend more time average in the intermediate space, such that the negative charge will be cancel out there, causing the positive charge to appear sandwiched between the interior and exterior negative. If someone wishes to mathematically/computer model this, help yourself. Maybe they can run an experiment to demonstrate your math. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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