I do understand I'm just looking for clarification, if an atom is not energy what is it?
AtomWP.
And if its a particle, a particle of what?
A particle of our universe.
I do understand I'm just looking for clarification, if an atom is not energy what is it?
And if its a particle, a particle of what?
Yes.so a photon is a form of energy like a packet of energy, a particle of energy?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_relativityWhat does that mean, I am refering to what appears to be real as a whole, not just the atoms, I am including spacetime and our understanding of reality.
Yes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_relativity
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_mechanics
Mind you, if you can merge those two into a single theory, there's a Nobel Prize in it for you. It's possibly the single most significant question in 21st century physics.
Then, as I said earlier, you've come to the wrong universe.Yes I know, to much maths for my liking.
Yes.Now we're not going to have any more talk about atoms and subatomic particles not being constituted of energy are we?
I once had an amazing dream where I was a plant growing and alive, it could feel the environment and everything.
Then, as I said earlier, you've come to the wrong universe.
Ok Ok I got the message, so our known universe is composed of activity and any kind of solid/substance/physical presence is an illusion/false.
This isn't quite what I expected a materialist to say.
PixyMisa Singularities are theoretical concepts predicted by General Relativity, in both black holes and at the Big Bang. For you to say something can come out of one is nonsense.
Yes I agree
my point was reality itself is illusory by nature.
RE PixyMisa post # 1865 Not so ... tensile strength in context to Roche limit comes in to play when forces other than gravity are holding the orbiting body together (e.g. a man-made spacecraft). Spacecraft consist of molecules bonded by EM. The earth is chock full of molecules and so EM signifies on a global scale. Okay you corrected yourself in post # 1867.The tensile strength of a body as large as the Earth over its entire size is essentially zero. In other words, the Earth as a body is held together by gravity; the electromagnetic force simply doesn't signify at that scale.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roche_limit
dlorde and others, we have been discussing what would happen if the electromagnetic force (EM) were to suddenly turn off on earth. This is in part a thought experiment to test whether gravity or EM holds our planet together. The answer is both are involved, especially in planets that consist of many molecules.
For info on EM there's an online video lecture: "What Holds Our World Together? Electric charges (Historical), Polarization, Electric Force, Coulomb's Law." The presenter is Walter Lewin and his lecture is one of a MIT series.
http://videolectures.net/mit802s02_lewin_lec01/
In my last reply to dlorde post #1855 I indicated that the volume of our planet would instantly shrink. I didn't realize how much. When the EM force turned off we have to try to imagine charged Standard Model particles: electrons, quarks & therefore protons, the weak forces W- & W+ vector bosons all suddenly losing their charges. Some would say this is crazy. I agree but follow along. When electrons lose their charge all of the space in the electron clouds get invaded by the new neutral electrons and other particles. This would cause the planet to shrink by many orders of magnitude. An atom's space encompassing the electron cloud is 10,000 times the volume of the nucleus. It is almost all space! So when I wrote that gravity would draw all the particles into a central area, this is no joke. The instant shrinkage in volume would cause a massive collision in the central area; followed by a huge rebound. Much of the matter would be ejected into outer space. Good bye Earth. Whatever survived would be a comparative miniscule ball but it would slowly dissipate, its particles being picked off by the solar wind.
The EM force is vital to holding Earth together!
Now, one thing I've noticed ... is that "faith" is almost always viewed as a "bad word" around here.
My conclusion (beyond correcting myself) is essentially that no one else was giving any (or very much) credence to EM.
I do understand I'm just looking for clarification, if an atom is not energy what is it?
And if its a particle, a particle of what?
Originally Posted by kenkoskinenRead the rest of the article. It discusses explicitly where the electromagnetic force is sufficient to hold a body together inside the Roche limit - and that's only for bodies less than 1/100th the diameter of the Earth.
Edit: Specifically, you can see that some of the smaller moons of the gas giants are inside the Roche limit for a fluid body, but outside an estimated Roche limit for a rigid body of that size. These small moons are being held together by the electromagnetic force. That doesn't work for larger bodies, because the tensile strength doesn't scale but the tidal stresses do.
Yes. Was there a point to all that?
Yes. But the statement "a photon is a form of energy" is not the same as the statement "a photon is made out of energy". The statement "a photon is a form of energy" is true. The statement "a photon is made out of energy" is nonsense.so a photon is a form of energy like a packet of energy, a particle of energy?
They are all the same, they are quanta of the unknowable yglem of 'energy', the 'partciles' are just constrained events of the quanta of yglem. They are wave forms all the time.
We don't know.
Dancing DavidThere would be no solar wind.
I get this, but the collisions would not be that spectacular, I agree that the EM forces are there and provide structure, but gravity is just as essential.
There could be no collisions as that is provided by the charge on the eelctrons. You would essentially have some form of dark matter.
let us take a less extreme example, what happens if the partcicles of a planet are neutral, they come together because of gravity and they stick to each other because of short range consequences of the EM forces.
That seems to be more balanced. SMT is Science Medice and Technology at the JREF,
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=5
Yes. But the statement "a photon is a form of energy" is not the same as the statement "a photon is made out of energy". The statement "a photon is a form of energy" is true. The statement "a photon is made out of energy" is nonsense.
You're still thinking of energy as if it's something like sand. And when someone says "sandcastles are a form of energy", you say, "yes, I understand," thinking that we're telling you that energy is a building material like sand. But energy isn't something like sand. It's not a type of thing like sand.
Eggs are a form of money. But money isn't something you can use to build a dozen eggs--I can't order a truckload of money, dump it in my yard, and rake it into a truckload of eggs. But if I have a truckload of sand, I could trade it for a truckload of eggs of equivalent value.
Eggs are a form of money, and sand is a form of money, but eggs are just whatever eggs are, and sand is just whatever sand is. Sand is made of tiny chunks of quartz, rocks, shells, and so forth, not this abstract thing called money. Eggs are made of egg shell, egg yolk, and egg whites, not an abstract thing called money. That eggs and sand are forms of money doesn't mean they're made out of the same type of thing--it simply means they can both buy things--like each other.
Stop treating energy as if it's sand. Energy isn't a building material. When we say that eggs are a form of money, stop assuming that we're telling you eggs are made of sand. We're not. We're telling you that eggs can buy things.
ETA: We can also say that eggs are money, and they are--because we can buy things with it, and money is "something you buy things with". But that claim doesn't mean that eggs are rearrangements of tiny amounts of "money".